| Literature DB >> 15316787 |
M A Fard1, T Ishihara, H Inooka.
Abstract
A method is proposed for identifying the head-neck complex (HNC) in the seated human body when it is exposed to the trunk horizontal (fore-and-aft) vibration. It is assumed that the HNC only has the anteroposterior (flexion/extension) motion in the sagittal plane. An electrohydraulic vibrator is used as a source of vibration. To generate the trunk horizontal vibration, the trunk of the seated subject is fixed to the seatback. The subjects are exposed to the random vibration at a magnitude of 1.60 ms(-2) rms (root-mean-square) for 50 s. The coherence and frequency response function are then obtained in the frequency range 0.5-3 Hz. The results show that the HNC behavior is quasilinear with a resonance frequency between 1 and 1.4 Hz. Accordingly, a two-dimensional single-inverted pendulum is considered as a model for the HNC. The frequency domain identification method is then used to estimate the unknown parameters, including the HNC viscoelastic and inertia parameters. The model is examined in a time domain using the random vibration. Good agreement is obtained between experimental and simulation results, indicating the reliability of the proposed method.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15316787 DOI: 10.1007/s00422-004-0489-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Cybern ISSN: 0340-1200 Impact factor: 2.086