Literature DB >> 31549531

Validation of a simplified human body model in relaxed and braced conditions in low-speed frontal sled tests.

Karan Devane1,2, Dale Johnson1,2, F Scott Gayzik1,2.   

Abstract

Objective: The goal of this study was to implement active musculature into the Global Human Body Models Consortium (GHBMC) average male simplified occupant model (M50-OS v2) and validate its performance in low-speed frontal crash scenarios.
Methods: Volunteer and postmortem human subjects (PMHS) data from low-speed frontal sled tests by Beeman et al., including 2.5 and 5.0 g acceleration pulses, were used to simulate events in LS-DYNA. All muscles were modeled as 1D beam elements and assigned a Hill-type muscle material. From the output of proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controllers, the activation level for each muscle was calculated using a sigmoid function, representing the firing rate of motor neurons. The PID controller attempts to preserve the initial posture of the model. Percentage muscle contribution for all skeletal muscles was precalculated using the M50-OS with active muscles (M50-OS + Active). The M50-OS + Active employs varying levels of neural delays to represent volunteer relaxed and braced conditions, taken from literature. Braced condition experiments were simulated using elevated joint angle set values for the PID controller. The M50-OS + Active model was used to simulate 2 muscle conditions (relaxed and braced) at 2 pulse severities (2.5 and 5.0 g). A control set of simulations was conducted to compare the effect of adding active muscle. Ten whole-body simulations were conducted.
Results: The results from volunteer simulations showed a strong dependence of reaction loads and kinematics on muscle activation. Compared to baseline, M50-OS, at 5.0 g acceleration, 33.3% and 7.6% decreases were observed in the overall head kinematics of the M50-OS + Active for the braced and relaxed conditions, respectively. Regarding the anterior direction, similar reductions in overall kinematics were observed for both volunteer test conditions. In comparison to control simulations in which no active muscle was implemented, objective evaluation scores increased markedly at both speeds for the braced condition. Little to no gain was found in the relaxed condition.Conclusions: The results justify the need for use of an active human body model for predicting low-speed frontal kinematics, particularly in the braced condition. Head kinematics were reduced when using active modeling for all simulations (braced and relaxed).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Active muscle; GHBMC; biomechanics; computational modeling; human modeling

Year:  2019        PMID: 31549531     DOI: 10.1080/15389588.2019.1655733

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Traffic Inj Prev        ISSN: 1538-9588            Impact factor:   1.491


  4 in total

1.  Trunk Skeletal Muscle Changes on CT with Long-Duration Spaceflight.

Authors:  Katelyn A Greene; Shanna S Withers; Leon Lenchik; Janet A Tooze; Ashley A Weaver
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2021-02-18       Impact factor: 3.934

2.  Multibody Models for the Analysis of a Fall From Height: Accident, Suicide, or Murder?

Authors:  Giulia Pascoletti; Daniele Catelani; Paolo Conti; Filippo Cianetti; Elisabetta M Zanetti
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2019-12-12

3.  Dynamic Spatial Tuning Patterns of Shoulder Muscles with Volunteers in a Driving Posture.

Authors:  Jason B Fice; Emma Larsson; Johan Davidsson
Journal:  Front Bioeng Biotechnol       Date:  2021-11-24

4.  'Falling heads': investigating reflexive responses to head-neck perturbations.

Authors:  Isabell Wochner; Lennart V Nölle; Oleksandr V Martynenko; Syn Schmitt
Journal:  Biomed Eng Online       Date:  2022-04-16       Impact factor: 3.903

  4 in total

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