This document provides an overview of histology for robot engineers, with the aim of showing how robots can truly reproduce the material behavior of living bodies. It discusses key topics such as:
1. The basic tissue types found in living things, including epithelia, connective tissues, bone, cartilage, ligaments, tendons, and muscle.
2. Joint structures like synovial joints, vertebral disks, and how they provide engineered stiffness.
3. The musculo-skeletal system, including how its formation and remodeling allows the shape to provide evidence of forces, and how muscles function as ligaments with variable length.
4. Comparative anatomy across species and biomechanics principles
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Under the microscopeCORE273 Summer2019What is Biology.docxouldparis
Under the microscope
CORE273 Summer2019
What is Biology?
Biology is a word derived from the Greek words bios, meaning “life”, and logos meaning “study”.
Therefore biology is defined as the science and study of life and living organisms.
An “organism” is a living entity consisting of one cell (bacteria) or several cells (plants, animals, fungi).
https://www.ntnu.edu/biology/about-us/what-is-biology
2
Characteristics of Living things
Made of different molecules than non-living things.
Carbon atoms form bonds with other atomic elements.
Molecules result: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids.
Require energy and raw materials.
Intake of above molecules offers energy and building blocks of cells.
Have a metabolism.
Breaks down/builds up molecules into/from atoms (respectively).
Living things will grow, reproduce, and evolve.
Characteristics of Living things
Respond to their environment and maintain homeostasis.
Necessary to maintain a relatively constant internal environment.
Systems present in any organism must respond to internal/external stimuli.
Make adjustments to compensate for stress on other systems.
Negative Feedback Loops
Controlled Variable is the factor being monitored.
Sensors keep “tabs” on if these factors are at their “set points”.
Control Center gathers information and determines appropriate actions.
Effectors are activated by control center to carry out necessary response.
Characteristics of Living things
All living things are composed of cells and cell products.
A single cell is the smallest unit exhibiting all characteristics of life.
Often divided by internal structural organization:
Prokaryotic cells lack a membrane bound “nucleus” and have few “organelles” (i.e.; bacteria)
Eukaryotic cells do have a membrane bound nucleus and many organelles with different functions (i.e.; plants, animals, fungi)
Inside our human Cells
Nucleus is the “brain”; directs activities via DNA.
DNA molecules contain our genetic information.
Organelles are “little organs”
Ribosomes: produce proteins.
Rough endoplasmic reticulum: produces proteins via ribosomes that are on membrane.
Smooth endoplasmic reticulum: produces primarily lipids; no ribosomes.
Golgi apparatus: refines, ships, and packages products from both endoplasmic reticula.
Mitochondria: “powerhouse”. Produces energy in the form of ATP molecules.
Cells of the body
While the internal structure remains fairly similar between cells of the body, cells can differ in external structure.
The form (shape/size) of a cell will greatly influence it’s overall function.
Neurons are long and thin for fast communication between cells.
Muscle cells have special segments that shorten to allow the tissue to contract.
Tissues of the body
Groups of similar cells come together to form tissues.
There are four primary types of tissues:
Epithelial: covers body cavities, lines organs, and surfaces.
Glandular epithelium secretes products.
Connective: supports and connects.
Loose, d ...
Homework V - Biomaterials Science
Cells are the most fundamental structures and functional units in a living body. Depending on their biological characteristics, they can be linked to 5 different kingdoms: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista and Monera. Eukaryote cells present in the Animalia, Plantae and Fungi are the most complex and the ones that are more often seen grouped in multicellular organisms. Some million years ago, cells started to organize themselves in tissues and later in organs, each one playing a different role in a living system.
IST - 4th Year - 2nd Semester - Biomedical Engineering.
NCERT Solutions | Class IX | Science (Biology) | Chapter 6 | TissuesBiswarup Majumder
NCERT Solutions for Class 9 Biology is available in PDF format which you can download easily. Here is the most accurate and detailed Biology NCERT solutions for Class 9th CBSE textbook for free of cost.
I hope this document is helpful to you. Please share the document with your friends if you think this will benefit them. Get ready for the next solution. Thanks.
Explore animal anatomy with our latest presentation! Discover animal tissues, organs, and organ systems in simple terms, perfect for NEET UG exam prep. Get ready to ace your exam with this easy-to-understand guide! #NEETUG #Biology
Under the microscopeCORE273 Summer2019What is Biology.docxouldparis
Under the microscope
CORE273 Summer2019
What is Biology?
Biology is a word derived from the Greek words bios, meaning “life”, and logos meaning “study”.
Therefore biology is defined as the science and study of life and living organisms.
An “organism” is a living entity consisting of one cell (bacteria) or several cells (plants, animals, fungi).
https://www.ntnu.edu/biology/about-us/what-is-biology
2
Characteristics of Living things
Made of different molecules than non-living things.
Carbon atoms form bonds with other atomic elements.
Molecules result: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids.
Require energy and raw materials.
Intake of above molecules offers energy and building blocks of cells.
Have a metabolism.
Breaks down/builds up molecules into/from atoms (respectively).
Living things will grow, reproduce, and evolve.
Characteristics of Living things
Respond to their environment and maintain homeostasis.
Necessary to maintain a relatively constant internal environment.
Systems present in any organism must respond to internal/external stimuli.
Make adjustments to compensate for stress on other systems.
Negative Feedback Loops
Controlled Variable is the factor being monitored.
Sensors keep “tabs” on if these factors are at their “set points”.
Control Center gathers information and determines appropriate actions.
Effectors are activated by control center to carry out necessary response.
Characteristics of Living things
All living things are composed of cells and cell products.
A single cell is the smallest unit exhibiting all characteristics of life.
Often divided by internal structural organization:
Prokaryotic cells lack a membrane bound “nucleus” and have few “organelles” (i.e.; bacteria)
Eukaryotic cells do have a membrane bound nucleus and many organelles with different functions (i.e.; plants, animals, fungi)
Inside our human Cells
Nucleus is the “brain”; directs activities via DNA.
DNA molecules contain our genetic information.
Organelles are “little organs”
Ribosomes: produce proteins.
Rough endoplasmic reticulum: produces proteins via ribosomes that are on membrane.
Smooth endoplasmic reticulum: produces primarily lipids; no ribosomes.
Golgi apparatus: refines, ships, and packages products from both endoplasmic reticula.
Mitochondria: “powerhouse”. Produces energy in the form of ATP molecules.
Cells of the body
While the internal structure remains fairly similar between cells of the body, cells can differ in external structure.
The form (shape/size) of a cell will greatly influence it’s overall function.
Neurons are long and thin for fast communication between cells.
Muscle cells have special segments that shorten to allow the tissue to contract.
Tissues of the body
Groups of similar cells come together to form tissues.
There are four primary types of tissues:
Epithelial: covers body cavities, lines organs, and surfaces.
Glandular epithelium secretes products.
Connective: supports and connects.
Loose, d ...
Homework V - Biomaterials Science
Cells are the most fundamental structures and functional units in a living body. Depending on their biological characteristics, they can be linked to 5 different kingdoms: Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista and Monera. Eukaryote cells present in the Animalia, Plantae and Fungi are the most complex and the ones that are more often seen grouped in multicellular organisms. Some million years ago, cells started to organize themselves in tissues and later in organs, each one playing a different role in a living system.
IST - 4th Year - 2nd Semester - Biomedical Engineering.
NCERT Solutions | Class IX | Science (Biology) | Chapter 6 | TissuesBiswarup Majumder
NCERT Solutions for Class 9 Biology is available in PDF format which you can download easily. Here is the most accurate and detailed Biology NCERT solutions for Class 9th CBSE textbook for free of cost.
I hope this document is helpful to you. Please share the document with your friends if you think this will benefit them. Get ready for the next solution. Thanks.
Explore animal anatomy with our latest presentation! Discover animal tissues, organs, and organ systems in simple terms, perfect for NEET UG exam prep. Get ready to ace your exam with this easy-to-understand guide! #NEETUG #Biology
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
Thinking of getting a dog? Be aware that breeds like Pit Bulls, Rottweilers, and German Shepherds can be loyal and dangerous. Proper training and socialization are crucial to preventing aggressive behaviors. Ensure safety by understanding their needs and always supervising interactions. Stay safe, and enjoy your furry friends!
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
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Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
1. Histology for robot engineers
About me:
Vet, 8 years of
emergency surgery
practice.
Engineer by nature,
became a surgeon by
accident
Came to robotics via
medical diagnostics
=> the need for
embodiment to ground
semantic concepts.
This seminar :
A synthesis of medical & engineering knowledge
Histology = the study of living tissue
Oscar the bionic cat
2. Acknowledgements
Evolutionary and Adaptive Systems group, University of Sussex
Prof Owen Holland, ECCE Robot Project,
Prof Ezequiel di Paolo, University of the Basque Country
Prof Inman Harvey, EASY group
Dr Luc Berthouze, Centre for Computational Neuroscience and Robotics
Dr Anil Seth, Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science
Dr Xabier Barandarian, CCNR
Dr Tom Frose, Philosophy of AI and Cognitive Science
Matthew Egbert, CCNR
and many others whose brains I have picked over the last two years.
(Any errors are mine alone.)
3. Aim
Show :
● Possible to make robots that truly reproduce the
material behaviour of living bodies.
● Why it is necessary that we make this change.
Assume know of : composites, elastomers, & gels.
4. Sections
What we must emulate:
1. Embodiment
2. The basic tissue types
3. Joints
4. Musculo-skeletal system
5. Biomechanics
Doing it:
6. Building a materially biomimetic robot
6. Pathology of embodimemt
Analyze robot anatomy as
human/animal pathology, “how
would this form affect the function
of a natural body”?
Robot bodies do not need to be
identical to humans.
Is the robot “sufficiently humanoid”
that a human child with this
pathology would still develop
healthily/normally ?
David Vetter, suffered
developmentally in later
childhood due to his
confinement.
7. Material embodiment
Role of the materials from which living
organisms are made.
Life is capable of producing very hard
materials such as the enamel of teeth,
and of armouring the body with dermal
bone and horn as we see in turtles, and
crustaceans,
BUT, in most niches vertebrates have
evolved soft bodies.
We need to pay attention to how they are
built and why this is more successful.
Functional biomimetics
8. soft, vulnerable, sensitive and reactive
The behaviour of living animals is
closely entwined with the materials
the materials they are made from.
It defines the behaviour of their
bodies without the input of nerves,
and it defines the problems which
the nervous system must solve.
What we observe is that living
things are “soft, vulnerable,
sensitive and reactive”.
There is a reason for this.
9. The needs of autopoiesis
Living things must organize & build
themselves from below the scale of
entropy -
that is they must manipulate and
assemble physical quanta (atoms &
molecules) to build themselves
upwards from that level.
This is necessary for living
organisms because if entropy wore
out the components they were
made from, how would they replace
them ?
10. Life occurs as a fibro-gel-emulsion
The need to manipulate individual
molecules means that life must
occur in solution.
… & limits materials to enzymatic
synthesis, which in turn makes heat
+ temperature crucial
The need to prevent that solution
from diffusing away, necessitates
cell membranes ,
and the need to hold cells together
individually and in multi-cellular
structures, necessitates polymer
fibres which make the gel both
within and between cells.
11. Non-fractal complexity
The problems to be solved at each
physical scale change with the
relative effects of intermolecular
forces, gravity, inertia and diffusion.
A characteristic feature of life is
non-fractal complexity
● Rock looks similar at scales
from micrometers to tens of
meters,
● Life shows different patters at
every scale.
Below a millimetre, diffusion and
molecular pumping at membranes
are sufficient for transport,
At larger scales bulk flow and
specialist pumping organs &
systems are essential.
12. Section 2 : The basic types of tissue
All tissues are composites with
task-specific material behaviours.
There are two fundamental tissue types
● epithelia
● connective tissue.
They are defined by the relation of cells
to the extra-cellular fibre-gel.
13. Epithelia
Multi-cellular equivalent of the cell
membrane.
Essential to the chemical
physiology of the body and
dominate the visceral organs.
Fundamentally 2D, topologically
continuous barrier separating two
extra-cellular fluid compartments.
Entropy of basement membrane
irreversible process of aging.
Basement membranes get their
structure from plastic expansion
during growth.
Cannot be repeated without
increasing the size of the organism.
14. Connective tissues
Most important for robotics,
● Dominate the musculo-skeletal system,
● Connective tissues are fundamentally 3D.
● Cells dispersed individually throughout an extra cellular gel,
● Composed of fibers and matrix.
15. Connective tissue : Blood
Blood is a connective tissue.
● Fibers are in solution as
fibrinogen,
● Precipitates to form fibrin when
clotting is triggered.
16. Connective tissue : Bone
Bone is a connective tissue whose
matrix is dominated by calcium
phosphate crystals, hence it is rigid.
17. Connective tissue : Ligaments, Tendons...
Ligaments, tendons, joint capsules, tendon sheaths,
fascia …
● Dominated by their fibrous component
● Varying coherence of orientation of their fibers,
● Varying elastic modulus.
18. Connective tissue : Dermis
Dermis has a fluid matrix, with a high
fiber density, random fiber orientation.
The fibers are a mix of
● hyper-elastic (elastin)
● high-strength low-elasticity
(collagen)
Macroscopically
● Connective tissue support for the
exterior epidermis.
● Shares the 2D continuous envelope
properties of the epidermis.
19. Connective tissue : Areolar
Areolar “loose” connective tissue is
the fundamental connective tissue
from which all others develop.
● Topologically continuous
throughout the body,
● Envelopes all other tissues.
● Dominated by hyper-elastic
fibers and fluid matrix
● Allows & lubricates the
movement of other tissues
relative to each other.
20. Connective tissue : Areolar -ve pressure
Crucially areolar connective tissue
is under negative pressure –
evidenced by the tendency of air to
infiltrate it when the skin or trachea
are perforated.
Areolar connective tissue's most
limiting dimension is its volume,
rather than its fibres.
It behaves like a sealed plastic bag
with a small amount of water
lubricating its movement.
21. Connective tissue : Muscle – motor & fuel cell
Muscles are connective tissue
dominated by metabolically active,
intra-cellular, contractile fibers.
These are the same actin & myosin
fibers that are responsible for
ameboid movement of white blood
cells and protozoa.
A muscle cell is both a linear
electrostatic motor and a fuel cell.
Essentially nil friction when relaxed
because the sliding distance is
microscopic and repeated in series
at every sarcomere.
22. Connective tissue : Muscle – compact power
Because muscles are a bundle of fibers, they can be
packed around bones & other muscles to produce impact
absorbing padding.
The force density of muscles is hard to match eg:
20kg child hopping on one leg.
Quadriceps of one leg must exert 2x body weight
With a 10:1 leverage disadvantage :- aprox 4000N
And muscle cross section area of 100cm2 = 0.01m2
400KPa or 60psi of tension,
with no gaps between actuators.
23. Connective tissue :
Cartilage
Cartilage is a fibrous tissue with a
turgid matrix that allows it to resist
compression, and retain its shape.
There are three types
Elastic, Fibrous, Hyaline.
Hyaline cartilage - forms the load
bearing surface of synovial joints.
Fibers parallel to the surface to
resist deformation by friction.
Under pressure it weeps synovial
fluid – hydrocolloid lubricant
24. Section 3 - Joints : cartilaginous
pro-chordates and cartilaginous fish
(sharks, eels, rays)
Notochord stiff cartilaginous rod,
flexed by contraction of muscles
either side.
Cartilaginous joints – eg sternum &
ribs
30. Human feet
Human plantar digits are short, but important for
balance. Most hand structures have analogues in
the foot
Muscles modify compliance.
The foot bears load either plantigrade (energy
saving), or digigrade when running and jumping.
Primate ankle movement is under-constrained by
ligaments, hence requires muscular effort.
31. Section 5 -Biomechanics :
Comparative anatomy
Finger nails are a higher primate feature, but hands are
ancient.
The basic design has been adapted to different loads.
The compliance of the carpus/tarsus is a consistent
feature.
Digital pads allow sensitivity, compliance & control.
32. Comparative anatomy : Hooves
Proportion and hardness are optimized
Horses are native to grassy plains. They rely on
compliant soil under foot.
Sheep are native to mountains, with stony soil. Their
hoof horn resembles vulcanized rubber.
33. Biomechanics of hands
Tendon networks –
preflexes : passive pure mechanical,
faster than reflexes, load balancing,
F.J.Valero-Cuevas 2007
hand closing : birds feet, primates
hands, amphibians, reptiles
Passive stay : hanging grip
35. Geometry of fingernails
Compliance with support gives greater
precision.
● small radius of curvature of dermis at
the end of the finger nail.
● importance of fingerprints and
balance of skin humidity for stiction.
36. Sensitive & robust
Tactile sensation & robustness : finger pad, finger
tip, finger nail, palmar vs dorsal sensitivities.
Note : scale and location of receptors in tissue.
37. Section - 6 : Building a materially biomimetic robot
Don't
When we build a robot it is not a
living organism.
It does not need to build itself,
hence we are not bound by the
physiological demands of
autopoiesis.
We do not need to use only
materials that are enzymatically
synthesized.
We do not need to reproduce the
visceral organs and entire
physiology of the organism.
Do
We need to produce the material
embodiment.
The musclo skeletal system and
organs of sensation, especially the
skin.
Our robot can have different
physiology, BUT
it should still look after itself in
terms of avoiding injury, regulating
body heat & energy reserves, and
other self maintenance .
38. Building biomimetic anatomy :
Skeletal system
Propose :
Resin transfer moulding + vacuum
bagging
Moulds 3D printed from meshes
adapted from medical imaging
– especially the CT, MRI & photo
sections from the visible human
project.
NB continuous fibers are essential
to prevent avulsion
39. Building biomimetic anatomy :
Skeletal system
Use either UHMWPE or high
temperature nylon depending on
elasticity required.
Use Polycaprolactone – low temp
crystalline thermoplastic eg ECCE
Robot.
Good – non-toxic, no fumes, good
lamellar bone imitator.
Use open cell phenolic foam –
spongy bone & lumen => forms
frame on which to pin the fibers
before closing the mould.
40. Building biomimetic anatomy :
Skeletal system
Use solid block UHMWPE carved &
polished for articular cartilage
Use thin flexible tubes of UHMWPE
for tendon sheaths.
Use water for lubrication.
42. Building Skin & Subcutis
Use soft silicone gel for areolar
tissue : finger pads – tactile flexibility
Use silicone impregnated knitted
nylon elastane (lycra) for dermis
Use thin coat of vinyl for epidermis
NB fingerprints embossed in dermis
Keratin lacquer for stratum corneum
43. Dehydrated jelly for Areolar tissue
Areolar tissue is a gel whose fibers are longer than
the tissue.
This can be made by polymerizing the gel in an
over hydrated state, then dehydrating it dow to the
final volume.
Use an air conditioner to extract vapor from the air.
NB the polymer must be a chemo-set that does not
form new linkages after the initial curing.
Dry the skin + sub-cutis separately from muscles +
fascia.
Spray the interface with mist of polyurethane, then
fit skin like a glove, & vacuum bag to bond them
together.
44. Building nerves
Use ultra fine optical image fibres
for nerves
Fibre diameter 12 microns
Bending radius 10mm
Free from electrical interference.
Aneal & stretch the last 10cm for
finer, more flexible fiber in the
fingers.
Bundle of 3000 fibres, diameter
0.2mm
Capture data on CMOS chips.
45. A more flexible nerve
3D inkjet printed silicone gel pipe
High refractive index oil printed into
the pipe.
Gel stretched to reduce diameter.
Cured to convert gel to elastomer.
Provides an optic fiber that will not
crack.
Fine enough to allow free
movement of subcutis.
Power LED for sensor via 'wires'
with saline hydrogel.
46. Nerve endings
Need to measure vibration, fine
resolution touch, deep pressure,
skin temperature, tension in
skin/tendon/ligaments.
0.125mm diameter optical pressure
sensors developed by University of
Maribor, Slovenia. Manufactured by
Fiso in Canada as FOP-F125.
Pressure range +/-300mgHg
Accuracy 5mmHg
Use 1 sensor per mm @ finger
tips, 1 per 5mm elsewhere
embed in dermal ridges of
fingerprint, ligaments, tendons,
nailbeds.
47. Protecting nerves
Make them longer than the tissue
around them
Run them in protected locations :
diagrams of anatomy
NB minimum radius of curvature for
optic fibers
NB stiffening effect of fibers in
tissue
48. Muscles
Need force density, dynamic range,
elasticity, soft fiber bundle, very low
resistance.
Hard to match muscle, BUT
We can use different actuators for
different purposes.
Dielectric gel stack actuators may
be useable.
1 MPa contraction matches muscle
High voltage requires insulation.
Danfloss Polypower lifting 10kg
49. Printable gel dielectric stack
Non-polar dielectric gel : eg
Hexane, Carotene, Silicone
Saline hydrogel gel for plates
Print sheets of muscles hyper
extended in pseudo-plastic fluid
state.
Compress longitudinally then cure
to form permanent gel shape, and
laminate to tendon fibers.
Allows structure much finer than the
resolution of the printer.
Hyperelastic gel spliced with tough
fibres resembles the relaxed state
of muscle
50. A Pneumatic muscle
Fully flexible
Integrates with skeletal system
Continuous tendon fibers
Varying matrix and geometry
Long stroke and high pressure
Low friction – anisotropic elastomer
composite
Better shape & more compact than
pleated or woven air muscles.
51. Soft pneumatic actuator - detail
Stress:strain curve - designed by varying circumference along length
52. A fibrous electric motor
Millimeter diameter, indefinite
length, “Force Tube”.
Low force
Very compact, and precise.
No bulging inflation
Muscles of facial expression
Fine control of fingers for delicate
tasks
53. Elastic in place of muscle
Fascia, sheet muscles of abdominal wall, deep
muscles of spine
Can be replaced with elastic – nylon-lycra sheets
passing into bones, elastomer matrix in muscle.
NB gel between muscle sheets.
Redundant level of control that is not essential for
normal movement.
The cost :
● cannot be tensed for extra rigidity - anticipating
impacts and heavy loads.
● Reduced agility
54. Making elastic muscles
Knitted nylon-lycra sheets that pass
through the bones of ribs and
spinal processes,
THEN impregnated with an elastic
matrix
NB direction of abd muscles +
place of actuators between the
sheets.
Vary elastic modulus & bulk of
material to vary the athletic
character of the robot.
Need gel = areolar tissue, between
the layers to eliminate friction.
55. Single fibro-elastic continuum
Think of the body as a single fibro-elastic continuum.
Cavities only exist if the shear strains necessitate it, ie
tendon sheaths and synovial joints
Muscular energy is expensive.
The body moves harmonically, transferring energy
between limbs. Areolar tissue provides low resistance,
elastic lubrication of relative movement.
Work-done is stored as inertia & elastic energy NOT
dissipated as friction/hysteresis.
There are multiple levels of tuned compliance,
achieved through variation of matrix, fibers, and
geometry.
Any object that does not share its elastic moduli,
anisotropies, geometry, and mass distribution cannot
have the same dynamics.
56. Body layout - adapt the natural solution
Put pipes & cables along routes of major blood
vessels & reserves. These areas have the least risk of
damage.
Abdomen bears load like a spinal disk. The lumbar
spine and fluid filled, muscle walled abdomen work
together for locomotion and balance.
Things that need
protection can be fixed to
the spine, like the
kidneys, or the inside of
the pelvis.
Unzip the mid-line for
access, + unbolt sternum
57. Power & Robot Physiology
Simple version 1, use umbilicus for
indoor activity & knapsack power
unit for out door activity.
Free play – climbing & running &
jumping may make internal power &
wifi worth the trouble.
On board power is not just about
freedom, and weight.
Heat, and energy metabolism are
essential functions that define basic
motivations.
Balancing learning with meeting
essential needs and avoiding harm
define the problem that emotion
and intelligence exist to solve.
58. Senses of taste & smell
olfaction & eating are very important.
Wet phase chemical sensors require
salivation & swallowing.
Tongue, cheeks, pharynx,
oesophagus would be buildable with
resin transfer and printed muscles.
59. Oral & vocal tracts
feasible goals with fibro-elastic tissues
very important for :
● social interaction
● infant exploration.
Should at minimum have lip-speaking and lip sensitivity.
60. Expressive eyes, Binaural hearing
Depth of field focusing,
Iris, foveated retina,
wide peripheral vision,
peri-ocular facial muscles.
Pinae & canals have substantial
tuning effect, relevant to direction
finding due to changing the frequency
spectrum.
61. Simulation of soft bodied robots
Sofa-framework for surgical
simulation coordinates FEM,
collision and other solvers.
Design/grow/evolve body + train
nervous system.
LGPL license, from INRIA, France.
62. FEM for anisotropic, hyper-elastic
GPU accelerated FEM
for anisotropic, hyper-elastic materials
including co-rotation.
physics-based simulation at an object
resolution of 64x64x64 is achieved at
interactive rates.
“A Real-Time Multigrid Finite
Hexahedra Method for Elasticity
Simulation using CUDA”
(C. Dick, J. Georgii, R. Westermann
Technical Report, July 2010)
Graphics & Visualization,
Technical University Munich
64. Bibliography
“Biological actuators are not just
springs” Buehrmann, T., and Di Paolo,
E. A., (2006).
“The organ of form: towards a theory of
biological shape” Francisco J. Varela
and Samy Frenk (1987)