Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise

Human quiet standing is accompanied by body sway. The amplitude of this body sway is known to be larger than would be predicted from simple noise effects, and sway characteristics are changed by neurological disorders. This large sway is thought to arise from nonlinear control with prolonged periods...

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Main Authors: Tetsuro Funato, Shinya Aoi, Nozomi Tomita, Kazuo Tsuchiya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150570
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spelling doaj-3ed184c4aaf441b7af91306cc485c68b2020-11-25T04:07:26ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-013110.1098/rsos.150570150570Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noiseTetsuro FunatoShinya AoiNozomi TomitaKazuo TsuchiyaHuman quiet standing is accompanied by body sway. The amplitude of this body sway is known to be larger than would be predicted from simple noise effects, and sway characteristics are changed by neurological disorders. This large sway is thought to arise from nonlinear control with prolonged periods of no control (intermittent control), and a nonlinear control system of this kind has been predicted to exhibit bifurcation. The presence of stability-dependent transition enables dynamic reaction that depends on the stability of the environment, and can explain the change in sway characteristics that accompanies some neurological disorders. This research analyses the characteristics of a system model that induces transition, and discusses whether human standing reflects such a mechanism. In mathematical analysis of system models, (intermittent control-like) nonlinear control with integral control is shown to exhibit Hopf bifurcation. Moreover, from the analytical solution of the system model with noise, noise is shown to work to smooth the enlargement of sway around the bifurcation point. This solution is compared with measured human standing sway on floors with different stabilities. By quantitatively comparing the control parameters between human observation and model prediction, enlargement of sway is shown to appear as predicted by the model analysis.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150570posture controldynamical modelhopf bifurcationnoise
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tetsuro Funato
Shinya Aoi
Nozomi Tomita
Kazuo Tsuchiya
spellingShingle Tetsuro Funato
Shinya Aoi
Nozomi Tomita
Kazuo Tsuchiya
Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
Royal Society Open Science
posture control
dynamical model
hopf bifurcation
noise
author_facet Tetsuro Funato
Shinya Aoi
Nozomi Tomita
Kazuo Tsuchiya
author_sort Tetsuro Funato
title Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
title_short Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
title_full Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
title_fullStr Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
title_full_unstemmed Smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
title_sort smooth enlargement of human standing sway by instability due to weak reaction floor and noise
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Human quiet standing is accompanied by body sway. The amplitude of this body sway is known to be larger than would be predicted from simple noise effects, and sway characteristics are changed by neurological disorders. This large sway is thought to arise from nonlinear control with prolonged periods of no control (intermittent control), and a nonlinear control system of this kind has been predicted to exhibit bifurcation. The presence of stability-dependent transition enables dynamic reaction that depends on the stability of the environment, and can explain the change in sway characteristics that accompanies some neurological disorders. This research analyses the characteristics of a system model that induces transition, and discusses whether human standing reflects such a mechanism. In mathematical analysis of system models, (intermittent control-like) nonlinear control with integral control is shown to exhibit Hopf bifurcation. Moreover, from the analytical solution of the system model with noise, noise is shown to work to smooth the enlargement of sway around the bifurcation point. This solution is compared with measured human standing sway on floors with different stabilities. By quantitatively comparing the control parameters between human observation and model prediction, enlargement of sway is shown to appear as predicted by the model analysis.
topic posture control
dynamical model
hopf bifurcation
noise
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150570
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