We propose and analyze the suitability of a spiking controller to engineer
the locomotion of a soft robotic crawler. Inspired by the FitzHugh-Nagumo model
of neural excitability, we design a bistable controller with an electrical
flipflop circuit representation capable of generating spikes on-demand when
coupled to the passive crawler mechanics. A proprioceptive sensory signal from
the crawler mechanics turns bistability of the controller into a rhythmic
spiking. The output voltage, in turn, activates the crawler's actuators to
generate movement through peristaltic waves. We show through geometric analysis
that this control strategy achieves endogenous crawling. The electro-mechanical
sensorimotor interconnection provides embodied negative feedback regulation,
facilitating locomotion. Dimensional analysis provides insights on the
characteristic scales in the crawler's mechanical and electrical dynamics, and
how they determine the crawling gait. Adaptive control of the electrical scales
to optimally match the mechanical scales can be envisioned to achieve further
efficiency, as in homeostatic regulation of neuronal circuits. Our approach can
scale up to multiple sensorimotor loops inspired by biological central pattern
generators.Comment: 5 pages, MTNS 2024 extended abstrac