Researcher profile

Jacques Raynal

Jacques Raynal contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

From Observed Viability to Internal Predictive Approximation: A Single-Subject Latent-Space Analysis of Gait Dynamics Under Occlusal Constraint

Adaptive biomechanical systems may show similar observable gait performance while differing in latent organization and longitudinal behavior. This study examines whether an observed longitudinal transformation of gait organization can be approximated within a predictive latent-space framework, without claiming clinical prediction or causal occlusal effects. Using an exploratory single-subject design in a Parkinsonian participant, gait was recorded with instrumented insoles during two sessions separated by eleven weeks. Six occlusal observational probes were tested: natural occlusion, open-mouth disengagement, strong clenching, two vertical-dimension increases in centric relation, and one vertical-dimension increase with mandibular protrusion. Principal Component Analysis was used to construct a PC1--PC2 latent representation. A simplified supervised machine-learning model, implemented as a feed-forward neural network, was trained to approximate the observed M1--M2 transformation. The primary analysis focused on the three centric-relation conditions and tested whether the displacement hierarchy could be reproduced. The model preserved the ordering OC3 < ONL < OC2.5. The extended six-probe analysis also preserved the global structure of the exploratory displacement pattern, with OC3 and OC3P closely grouped and the highest displacements associated with OC2.5 and open-mouth disengagement. Held-out M2 and leave-condition-out analyses showed condition-dependent approximation variability. These findings do not establish generalizable prediction, therapeutic superiority, causal occlusal effects, or clinical viability forecasting. They support only the restricted conclusion that observed longitudinal latent transformations can be internally approximated within this single-subject dataset, providing a methodological bridge toward future multi-subject predictive viability models.

preprint2026arXiv

From Organization to Viability: A Multi-Level Analysis of Gait Dynamics Under Occlusal Constraint

Clinical interpretation often assumes that observable performance provides sufficient information about the organization of an adaptive system. However, similar observable performance may correspond to distinct latent organizations. This study extends a previous multi-level framework by introducing a fourth analytical level centered on longitudinal viability. Using an exploratory single-case design in a Parkinsonian patient, gait data were recorded with instrumented insoles under three occlusal conditions: neutral natural occlusion (ONL), a 2.5-degree increase in vertical dimension of occlusion (OC2.5), and a 3-degree increase in vertical dimension of occlusion (OC3). Two measurement sessions were conducted eleven weeks apart, during which the participant underwent a structured sensorimotor intervention. The vertical dimension of occlusion was considered as an experimentally varied constraint applied to an adaptive neuromechanical system. Although observable performance remained globally comparable across conditions, PCA-based latent-space analysis revealed differentiated longitudinal centroid displacements. OC3 exhibited the smallest displacement, ONL an intermediate displacement, and OC2.5 the largest displacement. This hierarchy supports the relevance of a Level 4 framework centered on viability, understood here as an exploratory proxy for a configuration's capacity to maintain lower longitudinal reorganization over time. These findings remain within-subject, exploratory, and non-causal. They do not establish a validated clinical threshold, causal occlusal effect, or therapeutic optimum. More generally, the work suggests that clinical relevance cannot be inferred solely from instantaneous performance or static latent structure, but may also depend on the capacity of a configuration to sustain a coherent trajectory over time.

preprint2026arXiv

Observable Performance Does Not Fully Reflect System Organization: A Multi-Level Analysis of Gait Dynamics Under Occlusal Constraint

In biomechanical systems, observable performance is often used as a proxy for underlying system organization. However, this assumption implicitly presumes a correspondence between output metrics and internal system states that may not hold in adaptive systems. In this study, the vertical dimension of occlusion (VDO) is considered as a constraint applied to an adaptive neuromechanical system, enabling the exploration of system-level responses under controlled variations. A single-case design in a patient with Parkinson's disease allows an intra-individual analysis across repeated conditions.The analysis is structured across three complementary levels: (i) aggregated linear metrics describing observable performance, (ii) a dynamical systems framework describing temporal organization in state space, and (iii) a latent space representation obtained through unsupervised embedding. The results show that conditions with comparable observable performance may correspond to different organizations in both state space and latent space representations. This dissociation highlights a limitation of aggregated metrics and suggests that similar outputs may arise from non-equivalent system states. A fourth level is proposed as a purely conceptual extension describing potential relationships between system states. This level is not implemented and is not derived from experimental data. These observations are strictly exploratory and non-causal. The proposed framework does not establish mechanistic, predictive, or directional relationships, but provides a structured approach for analyzing constraint-driven systems across multiple levels of representation.