Connectionists: Frontiers in Neurorobotics: new open research topic

Florian Roehrbein florian.roehrbein at in.tum.de
Wed Feb 24 03:22:54 EST 2016


Topic Title: Neuromechanics and Control of Physical Behavior: From Experimental and Computational Formulations to Bio-inspired Technologies

Editors: Massimo Sartori, Manish Sreenivasa, Alfred C. Schouten, Matthew Tresch, Yoshihiko Nakamura, Francisco Valero-Cuevas

Abstract: The term "neuromechanics" defines an integrative approach that combines the neuromuscular control and the biomechanical aspects of physical behavior in humans and animals. Crucial to this approach is a detailed description and modeling of the interaction between the nervous system and the controlled biomechanical plant. Only then do we have the broader context within which to understand evolution, movement mechanics, neural control, energetics, disability and rehabilitation. In addition to enabling new basic science directions, understanding the interrelations between movement neural and mechanical function should also be leveraged for the development of personalized wearable technologies to augment or restore the motor capabilities of healthy or impaired individuals. Similarly, this understanding will empower us to revisit current approaches to the design and control of robotic and humanoid systems to produce truly versatile human-like physical behavior and adaptation in real-world environments. This Research Topic is therefore poised at an opportune moment to promote understanding of apparently disparate topics into a coherent focus.

For submission details see 
http://journal.frontiersin.org/researchtopic/4698/neuromechanics-and-control-of-physical-behavior-from-experimental-and-computational-formulations-to <http://journal.frontiersin.org/researchtopic/4698/neuromechanics-and-control-of-physical-behavior-from-experimental-and-computational-formulations-to>



-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu/pipermail/connectionists/attachments/20160224/57f261e2/attachment.html>


More information about the Connectionists mailing list