Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Re: Muscle and generation of force

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Re: Muscle and generation of force

    I can't answer all your questions but the information I have on the Hill
    model (I'm reading from 'Neuromechanics of Human Movement' by Roger M Enoka)
    is that the whole model approximates one muscle fiber. The various elements
    are there to model certain characteristics such as force/length and
    force/velocity relationships.

    Regards

    Joe Wright
    badmintology@topracket.com
    www.topracket.com/Badmintology
    >
    > > I would like to use the Hill-model
    > > which constitutes of a Contractile Element
    > > (CE), a Series Elastic Element (SE) and a
    > > parallel element (PE).
    > > First of all I would like to pose those questions:
    > >
    > > CE corrresponds to muscle fiber,
    > > SE to tendon and PE to other
    > > passive elements??
    >
    > -----------------------------------------------------------------
    > To unsubscribe send SIGNOFF BIOMCH-L to LISTSERV@nic.surfnet.nl
    > For information and archives: http://isb.ri.ccf.org/biomch-l
    > Please consider posting your message to the Biomch-L Web-based
    > Discussion Forum: http://movement-analysis.com/biomch_l
    > -----------------------------------------------------------------
    >

    -----------------------------------------------------------------
    To unsubscribe send SIGNOFF BIOMCH-L to LISTSERV@nic.surfnet.nl
    For information and archives: http://isb.ri.ccf.org/biomch-l
    Please consider posting your message to the Biomch-L Web-based
    Discussion Forum: http://movement-analysis.com/biomch_l
    -----------------------------------------------------------------
Working...
X