Deciphering the “Art” in Modeling and Simulation of the Knee Joint: Variations in Model Development

Author:

Rooks Nynke B.1,Schneider Marco T. Y.1,Erdemir Ahmet2,Halloran Jason P.3,Laz Peter J.4,Shelburne Kevin B.4,Hume Donald R.4,Imhauser Carl W.5,Zaylor William6,Elmasry Shady5,Schwartz Ariel2,Chokhandre Snehal K.2,Abdollahi Nohouji Neda7,Besier Thor F.8

Affiliation:

1. Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland, Level 6/70 Symonds Street, Grafton, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering & Computational Biomodeling (CoBi) Core, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Avenue (ND20), Cleveland, OH 44195

3. Applied Sciences Laboratory, Institute for Shock Physics, Washington State University, 1455 E. College Avenue, Spokane, Pullman, WA 99164

4. Department of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Center for Orthopaedic Biomechanics, University of Denver, 2155 E. Wesley Avenue, Denver, CO 80210

5. Department of Biomechanics, Hospital for Special Surgery, 535 E. 70th Street, New York, NY 10021

6. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Center for Human Machine Systems, Cleveland State University, 1960 E 24th Street, Cleveland, OH 44115

7. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Center for Human Machine Systems, Cleveland State University, 1960 E 24th Street, Cleveland, OH 44115; Department of Biomedical Engineering & Computational Biomodeling (CoBi) Core, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Avenue (ND20), Cleveland, OH 44195

8. Department of Engineering Science, Faculty of Engineering, Auckland Bioengineering Institute, University of Auckland, Level 6/70 Symonds Street, Grafton, Auckland 1010, New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract The use of computational modeling to investigate knee joint biomechanics has increased exponentially over the last few decades. Developing computational models is a creative process where decisions have to be made, subject to the modelers' knowledge and previous experiences, resulting in the “art” of modeling. The long-term goal of the KneeHub project is to understand the influence of subjective decisions on the final outcomes and the reproducibility of computational knee joint models. In this paper, we report on the model development phase of this project, investigating model development decisions and deviations from initial modeling plans. Five teams developed computational knee joint models from the same dataset, and we compared each teams' initial uncalibrated models and their model development workflows. Variations in the software tools and modeling approaches were found, resulting in differences such as the representation of the anatomical knee joint structures in the model. The teams consistently defined the boundary conditions and used the same anatomical coordinate system convention. However, deviations in the anatomical landmarks used to define the coordinate systems were present, resulting in a large spread in the kinematic outputs of the uncalibrated models. The reported differences and similarities in model development and simulation presented here illustrate the importance of the “art” of modeling and how subjective decision-making can lead to variation in model outputs. All teams deviated from their initial modeling plans, indicating that model development is a flexible process and difficult to plan in advance, even for experienced teams.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

Reference20 articles.

1. Deciphering the “Art” in Modeling and Simulation of the Knee Joint: Overall Strategy;ASME J. Biomech. Eng.,2019

2. Is There a Reproducibility Crisis?;Nature,2016

3. What Does Research Reproducibility Mean?;Sci. Transl. Med.,2016

4. A Combined Experimental and Computational Approach to Subject-Specific Analysis of Knee Joint Laxity;ASME J. Biomech. Eng.,2016

5. Validation of Predicted Patellofemoral Mechanics in a Finite Element Model of the Healthy and Cruciate-Deficient Knee;J. Biomech.,2016

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