Repository logo

Infoscience

  • English
  • French
Log In
Logo EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne

Infoscience

  • English
  • French
Log In
  1. Home
  2. Academic and Research Output
  3. Journal articles
  4. Decoding the essential interplay between central and peripheral control in adaptive locomotion of amphibious centipedes
 
research article

Decoding the essential interplay between central and peripheral control in adaptive locomotion of amphibious centipedes

Yasui, Kotaro
•
Kano, Takeshi
•
Standen, Emily M.
Show more
December 2, 2019
Scientific Reports

Amphibious animals adapt their body coordination to compensate for changing substrate properties as they transition between terrestrial and aquatic environments. Using behavioural experiments and mathematical modelling of the amphibious centipede Scolopendra subspinipes mutilans, we reveal an interplay between descending command (brain), local pattern generation, and sensory feedback that controls the leg and body motion during swimming and walking. The elongated and segmented centipede body exhibits a gradual transition in the locomotor patterns as the animal crosses between land and water. Changing environmental conditions elicit a mechano-sensory feedback mechanism, inducing a gait change at the local segment level. The body segments operating downstream of a severed nerve cord (no descending control) can generate walking with mechano-sensory inputs alone while swimming behaviour is not recovered. Integrating the descending control for swimming initiation with the sensory feedback control for walking in a mathematical model successfully generates the adaptive behaviour of centipede locomotion, capturing the possible mechanism for flexible motor control in animals.

  • Files
  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41598-019-53258-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:000500520800001

Author(s)
Yasui, Kotaro
Kano, Takeshi
Standen, Emily M.
Aonuma, Hitoshi
Ijspeert, Auke J.  
Ishiguro, Akio
Date Issued

2019-12-02

Publisher

Nature Research

Published in
Scientific Reports
Volume

9

Article Number

18288

Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sciences

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

coordination

•

terrestrial

•

walking

•

pattern

•

kinematics

•

organization

•

flexibility

•

circuits

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
BIOROB  
Available on Infoscience
December 12, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/163952
Logo EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
  • Contact
  • infoscience@epfl.ch

  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Instagram
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Follow us on X
  • Follow us on Youtube
AccessibilityLegal noticePrivacy policyCookie settingsEnd User AgreementGet helpFeedback

Infoscience is a service managed and provided by the Library and IT Services of EPFL. © EPFL, tous droits réservés