Researchers reveal the way our legs adapt to fast movements. When people hop at high speeds, key muscle fibers in the calf shorten rather than lengthen as forces increase, which they call 'negative ...
Credit: T. Buchner/ETH Zurich/T. Fukushima/Max-Planck-Institut/Cover Images Robots may be the technology of the future - but did you know they rely on technology that’s 200 years old to power them?
A participant jumps on the spot while wearing the team’s combination of sensors to provide test data for their analysis. Researchers at the University of Tokyo reveal the way our legs adapt to fast ...
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