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  4. Climbing favours the tripod gait over alternative faster insect gaits
 
research article

Climbing favours the tripod gait over alternative faster insect gaits

Ramdya, Pavan  
•
Thandiackal, Robin  
•
Cherney, Raphael
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2017
Nature Communications

To escape danger or catch prey, running vertebrates rely on dynamic gaits with minimal ground contact. By contrast, most insects use a tripod gait that maintains at least three legs on the ground at any given time. One prevailing hypothesis for this difference in fast locomotor strategies is that tripod locomotion allows insects to rapidly navigate three-dimensional terrain. To test this, we computationally discovered fast locomotor gaits for a model based on Drosophila melanogaster. Indeed, the tripod gait emerges to the exclusion of many other possible gaits when optimizing fast upward climbing with leg adhesion. By contrast, novel two-legged bipod gaits are fastest on flat terrain without adhesion in the model and in a hexapod robot. Intriguingly, when adhesive leg structures in real Drosophila are covered, animals exhibit atypical bipod-like leg coordination. We propose that the requirement to climb vertical terrain may drive the prevalence of the tripod gait over faster alternative gaits with minimal ground contact.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/ncomms14494
Web of Science ID

WOS:000394221000001

Author(s)
Ramdya, Pavan  
Thandiackal, Robin  
Cherney, Raphael
Asselborn, Thibault
Benton, Richard
Ijspeert, Auke  
Floreano, Dario  
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Nature Research

Published in
Nature Communications
Volume

8

Article Number

14494

Subjects

insect locomotion

•

robotics

•

tripod gait

•

animal behavior

•

evolutionary robotics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
NCCR-ROBOTICS  
LIS  
BIOROB  
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Available on Infoscience
February 18, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/134640
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