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Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 13, 2025
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Abstract Studying the nervous system underlying animal motor control can shed light on how animals can adapt flexibly to a changing environment. We focus on the neural basis of feeding control in
Aplysia californica . Using the Synthetic Nervous System framework, we developed a model ofAplysia feeding neural circuitry that balances neurophysiological plausibility and computational complexity. The circuitry includes neurons, synapses, and feedback pathways identified in existing literature. We organized the neurons into three layers and five subnetworks according to their functional roles. Simulation results demonstrate that the circuitry model can capture the intrinsic dynamics at neuronal and network levels. When combined with a simplified peripheral biomechanical model, it is sufficient to mediate three animal-like feeding behaviors (biting, swallowing, and rejection). The kinematic, dynamic, and neural responses of the model also share similar features with animal data. These results emphasize the functional roles of sensory feedback during feeding.Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 20, 2025 -
This paper details the development and validation of a dynamic 3D compliant worm-like robot model controlled by a Synthetic Nervous System (SNS). The model was built and simulated in the physics engine Mujoco which is able to approximate soft bodied dynamics and generate contact, gravitational, frictional, and internal forces. These capabilities allow the model to realistically simulate the movements and dynamic behavior of a physical soft-bodied worm-robot. For validation, the results of this simulation were compared to data gathered from a physical worm robot and found to closely match key behaviors such as deformation propagation along the compliant structure and actuator efficiency losses in the middle segments. The SNS controller was previously developed for a simple 2D kinematic model and has been successfully implemented on this 3D model with little alteration. It uses coupled oscillators to generate coordinated actuator control signals and induce peristaltic locomotion. This model will be useful for analyzing dynamic effects during peristaltic locomotion like contact forces and slip as well as developing and improving control algorithms that avoid unwanted slip.more » « less
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This study introduces a novel neuromechanical model of rat hindlimbs with biarticular muscles producing walking movements without ground contact. The design of the control network is informed by the findings from our previous investigations into two-layer central pattern generators (CPGs). Specifically, we examined one plausible synthetic nervous system (SNS) designed to actuate 3 biarticular muscles, including the Biceps femoris posterior (BFP) and Rectus femoris (RF), both of which provide torque about the hip and knee joints. We conducted multiple perturbation tests on the simulation model to investigate the contribution of these two biarticular muscles in stabilizing perturbed hindlimb walking movements. We tested the BFP and RF muscles under three conditions: active, only passive tension, and fully disabled. Our results show that when these two biarticular muscles were active, they not only reduced the impact of external torques, but also facilitated rapid coordination of motion phases. As a result, the hindlimb model with biarticular muscles demonstrated faster recovery compared to our previous monoarticular muscle model.more » « less
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This work explored synaptic strengths in a computational neuroscience model of a controller for the hip joint of a rat which consists of Ia interneurons, Renshaw cells, and the associated motor neurons. This circuit has been referred to as the Canonical Motor Microcircuit (CMM). It is thought that the CMM acts to modulate motor neuron activity at the output stage. We first created a biomechanical model of a rat hindlimb consisting of a pelvis, femur, shin, foot, and flexor-extensor muscle pairs modeled with a Hill muscle model. We then modeled the CMM using non-spiking leaky-integrator neural models connected with conductance-based synapses. To tune the parameters in the network, we implemented an automated approach for parameter search using the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method to solve a parameter estimation problem in a Bayesian inference framework. As opposed to traditional optimization techniques, the MCMC method identifies probability densities over the multidimensional space of parameters. This allows us to see a range of likely parameters that produce model outcomes consistent with animal data, determine if the distribution of likely parameters is uni- or multi-modal, as well as evaluate the significance and sensitivity of each parameter. This approach will allow for further analysis of the circuit, specifically, the function and significance of Ia feedback and Renshaw cells.more » « less
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One developing approach for robotic control is the use of networks of dynamic neurons connected with conductance-based synapses, also known as Synthetic Nervous Systems (SNS). These networks are often developed using cyclic topologies and heterogeneous mixtures of spiking and non-spiking neurons, which is a difficult proposition for existing neural simulation software. Most solutions apply to either one of two extremes, the detailed multi-compartment neural models in small networks, and the large-scale networks of greatly simplified neural models. In this work, we present our open-source Python package SNS-Toolbox, which is capable of simulating hundreds to thousands of spiking and non-spiking neurons in real-time or faster on consumer-grade computer hardware. We describe the neural and synaptic models supported by SNS-Toolbox, and provide performance on multiple software and hardware backends, including GPUs and embedded computing platforms. We also showcase two examples using the software, one for controlling a simulated limb with muscles in the physics simulator Mujoco, and another for a mobile robot using ROS. We hope that the availability of this software will reduce the barrier to entry when designing SNS networks, and will increase the prevalence of SNS networks in the field of robotic control.more » « less
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Abstract This article is a historical perspective on how the study of the neuromechanics of insects and other arthropods has inspired the construction, and especially the control, of hexapod robots. Many hexapod robots’ control systems share common features, including: 1. Direction of motor output of each joint (i.e. to flex or extend) in the leg is gated by an oscillatory or bistable gating mechanism; 2. The relative phasing between each joint is influenced by proprioceptive feedback from the periphery (e.g. joint angles, leg load) or central connections between joint controllers; and 3. Behavior can be directed (e.g. transition from walking along a straight path to walking along a curve) via low-dimensional, broadly-acting descending inputs to the network. These distributed control schemes are inspired by, and in some robots, closely mimic the organization of the nervous systems of insects, the natural hexapods, as well as crustaceans. Nearly a century of research has revealed organizational principles such as central pattern generators, the role of proprioceptive feedback in control, and command neurons. These concepts have inspired the control systems of hexapod robots in the past, in which these structures were applied to robot controllers with neuromorphic (i.e. distributed) organization, but not neuromorphic computational units (i.e. neurons) or computational hardware (i.e. hardware-accelerated neurons). Presently, several hexapod robots are controlled with neuromorphic computational units with or without neuromorphic organization, almost always without neuromorphic hardware. In the near future, we expect to see hexapod robots whose controllers include neuromorphic organization, computational units, and hardware. Such robots may exhibit the full mobility of their insect counterparts thanks to a ‘biology-first’ approach to controller design. This perspective article is not a comprehensive review of the neuroscientific literature but is meant to give those with engineering backgrounds a gentle introduction into the neuroscientific principles that underlie models and inspire neuromorphic robot controllers. A historical summary of hexapod robots whose control systems and behaviors use neuromorphic elements is provided. Robots whose controllers closely model animals and may be used to generate concrete hypotheses for future animal experiments are of particular interest to the authors. The authors hope that by highlighting the decades of experimental research that has led to today’s accepted organization principles of arthropod nervous systems, engineers may better understand these systems and more fully apply biological details in their robots. To assist the interested reader, deeper reviews of particular topics from biology are suggested throughout.
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Abstract Soft earthworm‐like robots that exhibit mechanical compliance can, in principle, navigate through uneven terrains and constricted spaces that are inaccessible to traditional legged and wheeled robots. However, unlike the biological originals that they mimic, most of the worm‐like robots reported to date contain rigid components that limit their compliance, such as electromotors or pressure‐driven actuation systems. Here, a mechanically compliant worm‐like robot with a fully modular body that is based on soft polymers is reported. The robot is composed of strategically assembled, electrothermally activated polymer bilayer actuators, which are based on a semicrystalline polyurethane with an exceptionally large nonlinear thermal expansion coefficient. The segments are designed on the basis of a modified Timoshenko model, and finite element analysis simulation is used to describe their performance. Upon electrical activation of the segments with basic waveform patterns, the robot can move through repeatable peristaltic locomotion on exceptionally slippery or sticky surfaces and it can be oriented in any direction. The soft body enables the robot to wriggle through openings and tunnels that are much smaller than its cross‐section.