Kinematic decomposition and classification of octopus arm movements

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Abstract

The octopus arm is a muscular hydrostat and due to its deformable and highly flexible structure it is capable of a rich repertoire of motor behaviors. Its motor control system uses planning principles and control strategies unique to muscular hydrostats. We previously reconstructed a data set of octopus arm movements from records of natural movements using a sequence of 3D curves describing the virtual backbone of arm configurations. Here we describe a novel representation of octopus arm movements in which a movement is characterized by a pair of surfaces that represent the curvature and torsion values of points along the arm as a function of time. This representation allowed us to explore whether the movements are built up of elementary kinematic units by decomposing each surface into a weighted combination of 2D Gaussian functions. The resulting Gaussian functions can be considered as motion primitives at the kinematic level of octopus arm movements. These can be used to examine underlying principles of movement generation. Here we used combination of such kinematic primitives to decompose different octopus arm movements and characterize several movement prototypes according to their composition. The representation and methodology can be applied to the movement of any organ which can be modeled by means of a continuous 3D curve. © 2013 Zelman, Titon, Yekutieli, Hanassy, Hochner and Flash.

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Zelman, I., Titon, M., Yekutieli, Y., Hanassy, S., Hochner, B., & Flash, T. (2013). Kinematic decomposition and classification of octopus arm movements. Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience, (APR 2013), 1–43. https://doi.org/10.3389/fncom.2013.00060

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