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Codman's paradox of the arm rotations is not a paradox: mathematical validation
Movement of a straight arm centred at the shoulder joint in three successive 90° rotations, each around the respective orthogonal coordinate axis, leads to an apparently unrelated 90° rotation around the longitudinal arm axis. This empirical fact is known as Codman's paradox, after a Bostonian...
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Published in: | Medical engineering & physics 1998-06, Vol.20 (4), p.257-260 |
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creator | Politti, Julio C Goroso, Gustavo Valentinuzzi, Max E Bravo, Orlando |
description | Movement of a straight arm centred at the shoulder joint in three successive 90° rotations, each around the respective orthogonal coordinate axis, leads to an apparently unrelated 90° rotation around the longitudinal arm axis. This empirical fact is known as Codman's paradox, after a Bostonian surgeon who first reported it in 1934. However, by means of homogeneous coordinates, it is herein demonstrated that the phenomenon is just a mechanical property mathematically described by the equivalence between the matricial product of three orthogonal rotation matrices applied to a position vector and the matricial product of a single rotation matrix applied to the same vector. The latter rotation matrix corresponds to the middle one in the former group of three. When polar coordinates are used, the demonstration is even simpler, for the total shift vector clearly shows a single net effect on the longitudinal axis rotation. Thus, Codman's paradox is not a paradox. This property improves the muscle dynamics arm knowledge and might find applications in robotics. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/S1350-4533(98)00020-4 |
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This empirical fact is known as Codman's paradox, after a Bostonian surgeon who first reported it in 1934. However, by means of homogeneous coordinates, it is herein demonstrated that the phenomenon is just a mechanical property mathematically described by the equivalence between the matricial product of three orthogonal rotation matrices applied to a position vector and the matricial product of a single rotation matrix applied to the same vector. The latter rotation matrix corresponds to the middle one in the former group of three. When polar coordinates are used, the demonstration is even simpler, for the total shift vector clearly shows a single net effect on the longitudinal axis rotation. Thus, Codman's paradox is not a paradox. 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subjects | Arm - physiology arm biomechanics arm muscle electromyography Biological and medical sciences Biomechanical Phenomena Biomedical Engineering Computerized, statistical medical data processing and models in biomedicine Electromyography homogeneous coordinates Humans Mathematical techniques Mathematics matrices Matrix algebra Medical sciences Models and simulation Models, Biological polar coordinates Rotation Vectors |
title | Codman's paradox of the arm rotations is not a paradox: mathematical validation |
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