Gregory P. Sutton, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2006 | Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Heights, OH, United States |
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Sign in to add mentorHillel Chiel | grad student | 2006 | Case Western | |
(Passive force hysteresis, context-dependence, and structural reconfiguration underlying multifunctionality in Aplysia californica.) |
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Publications
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Rogers SM, Cullen DA, Labonte D, et al. (2024) RNAi of the elastomeric protein resilin reduces jump velocity and resilience to damage in locusts. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 122: e2415625121 |
Harrison SL, Sutton GP, Herrel A, et al. (2024) Estimated and in vivo measurements of bite force demonstrate exceptionally large bite forces in parrots (Psittaciformes). Journal of Anatomy |
Sukhnandan R, Chen Q, Shen J, et al. (2024) Full Hill-type muscle model of the I1/I3 retractor muscle complex in Aplysia californica. Biological Cybernetics |
Li Y, Webster-Wood VA, Gill JP, et al. (2024) A computational neural model that incorporates both intrinsic dynamics and sensory feedback in the Aplysia feeding network. Biological Cybernetics |
Rogers SM, Gill JP, De Campos AS, et al. (2024) Scaling of buccal mass growth and muscle activation determine the duration of feeding behaviors in the marine mollusc Aplysia californica. The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Sutton GP, St Pierre R, Kuo CY, et al. (2022) Dual spring force couples yield multifunctionality and ultrafast, precision rotation in tiny biomechanical systems. The Journal of Experimental Biology. 225 |
Feller KD, Sutton GP, Gonzalez-Bellido PT. (2020) Medium compensation in a spring-actuated system. The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Sutton GP, Mendoza E, Azizi E, et al. (2019) Why don't large animals exclusively use springs to jump? Because they can jump higher without them. Integrative and Comparative Biology |
Rosario MV, Sutton GP, Patek SN, et al. (2016) Muscle-spring dynamics in time-limited, elastic movements. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 283 |
Sutton GP, Doroshenko M, Cullen DA, et al. (2016) Take-off speed in jumping mantises depends on body size and a power limited mechanism. The Journal of Experimental Biology |