Proprioceptive feedback amplification restores effective locomotion in a neuromechanical model of lampreys with spinal injuries
Proprioceptive feedback amplification restores effective locomotion in a neuromechanical model of lampreys with spinal injuries
Date
2023-03-10
Authors
Hamlet, Christina
Fauci, Lisa
Morgan, Jennifer R.
Tytell, Eric D
Fauci, Lisa
Morgan, Jennifer R.
Tytell, Eric D
Linked Authors
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DOI
10.1073/pnas.2213302120
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Keywords
Computational fluid dynamics
Locomotion
Neurophysiology
Sensory feedback
Locomotion
Neurophysiology
Sensory feedback
Abstract
Spinal injuries in many vertebrates can result in partial or complete loss of locomotor ability. While mammals often experience permanent loss, some nonmammals, such as lampreys, can regain swimming function, though the exact mechanism is not well understood. One hypothesis is that amplified proprioceptive (body-sensing) feedback can allow an injured lamprey to regain functional swimming even if the descending signal is lost. This study employs a multiscale, integrative, computational model of an anguilliform swimmer fully coupled to a viscous, incompressible fluid and examines the effects of amplified feedback on swimming behavior. This represents a model that analyzes spinal injury recovery by combining a closed-loop neuromechanical model with sensory feedback coupled to a full Navier-Stokes model. Our results show that in some cases, feedback amplification below a spinal lesion is sufficient to partially or entirely restore effective swimming behavior.
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© The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Hamlet, C., Fauci, L., Morgan, J. R., & Tytell, E. D. Proprioceptive feedback amplification restores effective locomotion in a neuromechanical model of lampreys with spinal injuries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(11), (2023): e2213302120, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2213302120.
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Hamlet, C., Fauci, L., Morgan, J. R., & Tytell, E. D. (2023). Proprioceptive feedback amplification restores effective locomotion in a neuromechanical model of lampreys with spinal injuries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(11), e2213302120.