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The heat of shortening and the dynamic constants of muscle

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TLDR
In this article, a more accurate and rapid technique for muscle heat measurement was proposed, and some astonishingly simple and accurate relations have been found, which determine the effect of load on speed of shortening, allow the form of the isometric contraction to be predicted, and are the basis of the so-called "visco-elasticity" of skeletal muscle.
Abstract
The hope was recently expressed (Hill 1937, p. 116) that with the development of a more accurate and rapid technique for muscle heat measurement, a much more consistent picture might emerge of the energy relations of muscles shortening (or lengthening) and doing positive (or negative) work. This hope has been realized, and some astonishingly simple and accurate relations have been found, relations, moreover, which (among other things) determine the effect of load on speed of shortening, allow the form of the isometric contraction to be predicted, and are the basis of the so-called “visco-elasticity” of skeletal muscle. This paper is divided into three parts. In Part I further developments of the technique are described: everything has depended on the technique, so no apology is needed for a rather full description of it and of the precautions necessary. In Part II the results themselves are described and discussed. In Part III the “visco-elastic” properties of active muscle are shown to be a consequence of the properties described in Part II.

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Citations
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Quantifying control effort of biological and technical movements: An information-entropy-based approach

TL;DR: By calculating the Shannon information entropy of all sensor signals required for control, an information cost function can be formulated allowing the comparison of models of biological and technical control systems.
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Leg Muscles Design: The Maximum Dynamic Output Hypothesis

TL;DR: It is shown that the optimal load for the power and momentum production in vertical jumping in habitually active individuals (but not in strength/power-trained athletes) could be the subject's own body, implying that the performance of rapid movements corresponds to body-size-independent MDO of the lower-limb muscles.
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Excitation-Contraction Coupling in a Barnacle Muscle Fiber As Examined with Voltage Clamp Technique

TL;DR: The slope of the final tension-membrane potential curve increases with increasing external Ca concentration and is reduced when a small amount of transition metal ions is added to the medium, suggesting that the influx of Ca ions through the membrane is an important factor in the development of tension.
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Left Ventricular Afterload and Aortic Input Impedance: Implications of Pulsatile Blood Flow

TL;DR: Myocardial function and afterload in isolated papillary muscle experiments is reviewed and the concept of load in the intact ventricle is discussed, with emphasis on aortic input impedance.
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Strain, Muscle Length and Work Output in a Crab Muscle

TL;DR: The relationships between muscle length, fractional change in length (strain) and work output during cyclic contraction were examined in scaphognathite levator muscle L2B of the green crab Carcinus maenas.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The visco-elastic properties of frog's muscles.

TL;DR: The behaviour under sudden stress, or under sudden extension, of all visco-elastic substances (rubber, gelatin jellies, etc.) suggests a system partly damped, partly undamped.
Journal ArticleDOI

The thermo‐elastic properties of muscle

TL;DR: The great improvement in myothermic technique achieved in recent years suggested a re-investigation of the problem, and this is described below, where the coefficient of linear expansion of muscle is negative when its initial extension is less than 35 p.c. of its unloaded length and with greater initial extension the coefficient becomes positive.