An energy landscape approach to locomotor transitions in complex 3D terrain
Ratan Othayoth, George Thoms, Chen Li

TL;DR
This paper introduces an energy landscape framework to understand how animals and robots transition between locomotor modes in complex 3D terrain, revealing probabilistic barrier-crossing dynamics similar to microscopic systems.
Contribution
It presents a novel energy landscape approach to explain locomotor transitions in complex terrain, bridging physics and biomechanics for animals and robots.
Findings
Locomotor transitions correspond to barrier crossings on a potential energy landscape.
Kinetic energy fluctuations facilitate stochastic escapes over energy barriers.
Transitions are more probable towards lower energy barriers.
Abstract
Effective locomotion in nature happens by transitioning across multiple modes (e.g., walk, run, climb). Despite this, far more mechanistic understanding of terrestrial locomotion has been on how to generate and stabilize around near-steady-state movement in a single mode. We still know little about how locomotor transitions emerge from physical interaction with complex terrain. Consequently, robots largely rely on geometric maps to avoid obstacles, not traverse them. Recent studies revealed that locomotor transitions in complex 3-D terrain occur probabilistically via multiple pathways. Here, we show that an energy landscape approach elucidates the underlying physical principles. We discovered that locomotor transitions of animals and robots self-propelled through complex 3-D terrain correspond to barrier-crossing transitions on a potential energy landscape. Locomotor modes are attracted…
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