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Associate Professor Taylor Dick
Associate Professor

Taylor Dick

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 52198

Overview

Background

Taylor Dick is an Associate Professor in The School of Biomedical Sciences and Director of the Neuromuscular Biomechanics Laboratory within the School of Biomedical Sciences. She leads a highly interdisciplinary research program at the nexus of biomechanics, bio-inspired assistive devices, and neuromuscular physiology. Using a combination of experimental and modelling tools, her research answers fundamental questions about how movement underpins evolution, health, and disease.

Upon completing her PhD in 2016 (Simon Fraser University, Canada), in collaboration with Harvard’s Concord Field Station, she undertook post-doctoral training in biomedical engineering (University of North Carolina, 2016-17) where she combined her expertise in biomechanics and muscle physiology to discover how bio-robotic devices influence locomotor energetics and the neuromechanical mechanisms that enable stability during unexpected perturbations. This has since provided inspiration for the optimization of bio-robotic assistive devices, in response to the behaviour of their physiological targets. In 2017, she was appointed a research and teaching academic at the University of Queensland (UQ) where she has developed a uniquely integrative and multi-disciplinary approach to studying locomotion and neuromuscular function with applications across discovery and translation. Her research program integrates musculoskeletal anatomy, neural control, and biomechanics to understand the diverse movements of humans and animals. By combining high-resolution and innovative experimental paradigms with modelling and simulation techniques, her team, a rich blend of biomechanists, physiologists, mathematicians, engineers, and computer scientists, investigates the complex interactions between biological systems that enable the remarkable diversity in human and animal movement.

Taylor has established herself internationally as an emerging leader in biomechanics research. This reputation is supported by prestigious awards, invited talks and review papers, and media attention. Her research has been funded through competitive grant schemes and industry partnerships, with total research support exceeding $3.6 million. Her contributions to research and mentorship have been recognized with a 2024 Queensland Tall Poppy Award, 2024 International Union of Physiologists Junior Faculty Award; 2024 International Society of Electrophysiology and Kinesiology Kevin P. Granata Award, and the 2021 International Society of Biomechanics Jaquelin Perry Emerging Scientist Award. Taylor has been nominated (2020 and 2021) for the Faculty of Medicine Rising Star of the Year Award. Taylor is an elected Executive Council member of the International Society of Biomechanics (ISB) and the elected Chairperson of the Comparative Neuromuscular Biomechanics Technical group. She is a passionate promotor of STEM for young girls—having co-developed the led a government-funded nationwide program to boost girls’ engagement in STEM, BRInC https://www.canberra.edu.au/about-uc/faculties/health/brinc

She currently advises 12 PhD candidates, 1 Master’s student, and 5 Honours students. She has successfully advised 5 PhD, 2 Master’s and 9 Honours students to completion since commencing her faculty position at UQ in 2017.

For more information about her program of research, visit her lab website: https://biomedical-sciences.uq.edu.au/research/groups/neuromuscular-biomechanics

Availability

Associate Professor Taylor Dick is:
Available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, Simon Fraser University

Research interests

  • Muscle and tendon mechanics

  • Biomechanics

  • Musculoskeletal imaging

  • Comparative biomechanics

  • Neuromuscular health

Research impacts

The outcomes from my groups research will advance our understanding of neuromotor and musculoskeletal function to (1) augment healthy locomotor performance; (2) treat and prevent movement impairments that result from age, obesity, or neuromotor disease and (3) inform the design of biologically-inspired assistive wearable robotic devices.

Works

Search Professor Taylor Dick’s works on UQ eSpace

58 works between 2013 and 2025

21 - 40 of 58 works

2022

Journal Article

Inclusion of image-based in vivo experimental data into the Hill-type muscle model affects the estimation of individual force-sharing strategies during walking

Hamard, Raphaël, Hug, François, Kelp, Nicole Y., Feigean, Romain, Aeles, Jeroen and Dick, Taylor J.M. (2022). Inclusion of image-based in vivo experimental data into the Hill-type muscle model affects the estimation of individual force-sharing strategies during walking. Journal of Biomechanics, 135 111033, 111033. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2022.111033

Inclusion of image-based in vivo experimental data into the Hill-type muscle model affects the estimation of individual force-sharing strategies during walking

2022

Journal Article

Scaling of fibre area and fibre glycogen concentration in the hindlimb musculature of monitor lizards: implications for locomotor performance with increasing body size

Cieri, Robert L., Dick, Taylor J. M., Morris, Jeremy S. and Clemente, Christofer J. (2022). Scaling of fibre area and fibre glycogen concentration in the hindlimb musculature of monitor lizards: implications for locomotor performance with increasing body size. The Journal of Experimental Biology, 225 (Supp. 1) jeb243380. doi: 10.1242/jeb.243380

Scaling of fibre area and fibre glycogen concentration in the hindlimb musculature of monitor lizards: implications for locomotor performance with increasing body size

2022

Journal Article

Regional variation in lateral and medial gastrocnemius muscle fibre lengths obtained from diffusion tensor imaging

Aeles, Jeroen, Bolsterlee, Bart, Kelp, Nicole Y., Dick, Taylor J. M. and Hug, François (2022). Regional variation in lateral and medial gastrocnemius muscle fibre lengths obtained from diffusion tensor imaging. Journal of Anatomy, 240 (1) joa.13539, 131-144. doi: 10.1111/joa.13539

Regional variation in lateral and medial gastrocnemius muscle fibre lengths obtained from diffusion tensor imaging

2022

Conference Publication

Spring like passive elastic exoskeletons may improve stability and safety of locomotion in uneven terrain

Punith, Laksh Kumar, Williamson, James, Dick, Taylor J. M. and Sawicki, Gregory S. (2022). Spring like passive elastic exoskeletons may improve stability and safety of locomotion in uneven terrain. 5th International Symposium on Wearable Robotics, WeRob2020, and of WearRAcon Europe 2020, Virtual, 13-16 October 2020. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-69547-7_7

Spring like passive elastic exoskeletons may improve stability and safety of locomotion in uneven terrain

2021

Journal Article

Muscle architecture and shape changes in the gastrocnemii of active younger and older adults

Kelp, Nicole Y., Gore, Anna, Clemente, Christofer J., Tucker, Kylie, Hug, François and Dick, Taylor J.M. (2021). Muscle architecture and shape changes in the gastrocnemii of active younger and older adults. Journal of Biomechanics, 129 110823, 110823. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2021.110823

Muscle architecture and shape changes in the gastrocnemii of active younger and older adults

2021

Journal Article

Quantity versus quality: age-related differences in muscle volume, intramuscular fat, and mechanical properties in the triceps surae

Pinel, Sabrina, Kelp, Nicole Y., Bugeja, Jessica M., Bolsterlee, Bart, Hug, François and Dick, Taylor J.M. (2021). Quantity versus quality: age-related differences in muscle volume, intramuscular fat, and mechanical properties in the triceps surae. Experimental Gerontology, 156 111594, 1-11. doi: 10.1016/j.exger.2021.111594

Quantity versus quality: age-related differences in muscle volume, intramuscular fat, and mechanical properties in the triceps surae

2021

Journal Article

Does different activation between the medial and the lateral gastrocnemius during walking translate into different fascicle behavior?

Hamard, Raphaël, Aeles, Jeroen, Kelp, Nicole Y., Feigean, Romain, Hug, François and Dick, Taylor J. M. (2021). Does different activation between the medial and the lateral gastrocnemius during walking translate into different fascicle behavior?. Journal of Experimental Biology, 224 (12) jeb242626, 1-9. doi: 10.1242/jeb.242626

Does different activation between the medial and the lateral gastrocnemius during walking translate into different fascicle behavior?

2021

Conference Publication

Ground reaction forces and muscle allometry in monitor lizards (Varanidae) with implications for the scaling of locomotion in sprawling tetrapods

Cieri, Robert, Clemente, Christofer and Dick, Taylor (2021). Ground reaction forces and muscle allometry in monitor lizards (Varanidae) with implications for the scaling of locomotion in sprawling tetrapods. Experimental Biology 2021 Meeting, Online, 27-31 April 2021. Hoboken, NJ United States: John Wiley & Sons. doi: 10.1096/fasebj.2021.35.s1.04739

Ground reaction forces and muscle allometry in monitor lizards (Varanidae) with implications for the scaling of locomotion in sprawling tetrapods

2021

Journal Article

Series elasticity facilitates safe plantar flexor muscle–tendon shock absorption during perturbed human hopping

Dick, Taylor J. M., Clemente, Christofer J., Punith, Laksh K. and Sawicki, Gregory S. (2021). Series elasticity facilitates safe plantar flexor muscle–tendon shock absorption during perturbed human hopping. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 288 (1947) rspb.2021.0201, 20210201. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0201

Series elasticity facilitates safe plantar flexor muscle–tendon shock absorption during perturbed human hopping

2021

Journal Article

The scaling of ground reaction forces and duty factor in monitor lizards: implications for locomotion in sprawling tetrapods

Cieri, Robert L., Dick, Taylor J. M., Irwin, Robert, Rumsey, Daniel and Clemente, Christofer J. (2021). The scaling of ground reaction forces and duty factor in monitor lizards: implications for locomotion in sprawling tetrapods. Biology Letters, 17 (2) 20200612, 1-8. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2020.0612

The scaling of ground reaction forces and duty factor in monitor lizards: implications for locomotion in sprawling tetrapods

2021

Journal Article

Lower-limb muscle function is influenced by changing mechanical demands in cycling

Lai, Adrian K. M., Dick, Taylor J. M., Brown, Nicholas A. T., Biewener, Andrew A. and Wakeling, James M. (2021). Lower-limb muscle function is influenced by changing mechanical demands in cycling. The Journal of Experimental Biology, 224 (3) jeb228221. doi: 10.1242/jeb.228221

Lower-limb muscle function is influenced by changing mechanical demands in cycling

2021

Conference Publication

Towards balance assessment using Openpose

Li, Brighton, Williamson, James, Kelp, Nicole, Dick, Taylor and Bo, Antonio P. L. (2021). Towards balance assessment using Openpose. Annual International Conference of the IEEE-Engineering-in-Medicine-and-Biology-Society (IEEE EMBC), Electr Network, 1-5 November 2021. Piscataway, NJ, United States: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. doi: 10.1109/EMBC46164.2021.9631001

Towards balance assessment using Openpose

2021

Journal Article

Task-dependent recruitment across ankle extensor muscles and between mechanical demands is driven by the metabolic cost of muscle contraction

Lai, Adrian K. M., Dick, Taylor J. M., Biewener, Andrew A. and Wakeling, James M. (2021). Task-dependent recruitment across ankle extensor muscles and between mechanical demands is driven by the metabolic cost of muscle contraction. Journal of The Royal Society Interface, 18 (174) 20200765, 20200765. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2020.0765

Task-dependent recruitment across ankle extensor muscles and between mechanical demands is driven by the metabolic cost of muscle contraction

2020

Journal Article

Age-related differences in gastrocnemii muscles and Achilles tendon mechanical properties in vivo

Lindemann, India, Coombes, Brooke K., Tucker, Kylie, Hug, François and Dick, Taylor J.M. (2020). Age-related differences in gastrocnemii muscles and Achilles tendon mechanical properties in vivo. Journal of Biomechanics, 112 110067, 110067. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2020.110067

Age-related differences in gastrocnemii muscles and Achilles tendon mechanical properties in vivo

2020

Journal Article

Monitoring muscle over three orders of magnitude: widespread positive allometry among locomotor and body support musculature in the pectoral girdle of varanid lizards (Varanidae)

Cieri, Robert L., Dick, Taylor J. M. and Clemente, Christofer J. (2020). Monitoring muscle over three orders of magnitude: widespread positive allometry among locomotor and body support musculature in the pectoral girdle of varanid lizards (Varanidae). Journal of Anatomy, 237 (6) joa.13273, 1114-1135. doi: 10.1111/joa.13273

Monitoring muscle over three orders of magnitude: widespread positive allometry among locomotor and body support musculature in the pectoral girdle of varanid lizards (Varanidae)

2020

Journal Article

Biomechanical insights into the role of foot pads during locomotion in camelid species

Clemente, Christofer J., Dick, Taylor J. M., Glen, Christopher L. and Panagiotopoulou, Olga (2020). Biomechanical insights into the role of foot pads during locomotion in camelid species. Scientific Reports, 10 (1) 3856, 3856. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-60795-9

Biomechanical insights into the role of foot pads during locomotion in camelid species

2020

Journal Article

Ultrasound imaging links soleus muscle neuromechanics and energetics during human walking with elastic ankle exoskeletons

Nuckols, R. W., Dick, T. J.M., Beck, O. N. and Sawicki, G. S. (2020). Ultrasound imaging links soleus muscle neuromechanics and energetics during human walking with elastic ankle exoskeletons. Scientific Reports, 10 (1) 3604, 3604. doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-60360-4

Ultrasound imaging links soleus muscle neuromechanics and energetics during human walking with elastic ankle exoskeletons

2020

Journal Article

Correction to ‘Humans falling in holes: adaptations in lower-limb joint mechanics in response to a rapid change in substrate height during human hopping’

Dick, T. J., Punith, L. K. and Sawicki, G. S. (2020). Correction to ‘Humans falling in holes: adaptations in lower-limb joint mechanics in response to a rapid change in substrate height during human hopping’. Journal of The Royal Society Interface, 17 (163) 20200047, 20200047. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2020.0047

Correction to ‘Humans falling in holes: adaptations in lower-limb joint mechanics in response to a rapid change in substrate height during human hopping’

2019

Journal Article

Humans falling in holes: adaptations in lower-limb joint mechanics in response to a rapid change in substrate height during human hopping

Dick, Taylor J. M., Punith, Laksh K. and Sawicki, Gregory S. (2019). Humans falling in holes: adaptations in lower-limb joint mechanics in response to a rapid change in substrate height during human hopping. Journal of The Royal Society Interface, 16 (159) 20190292, 20190292. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2019.0292

Humans falling in holes: adaptations in lower-limb joint mechanics in response to a rapid change in substrate height during human hopping

2019

Journal Article

Mechanics and energetics of post-stroke walking aided by a powered ankle exoskeleton with speed-adaptive myoelectric control

McCain, Emily M., Dick, Taylor J. M., Giest, Tracy N., Nuckols, Richard W., Lewek, Michael D., Saul, Katherine R. and Sawicki, Gregory S. (2019). Mechanics and energetics of post-stroke walking aided by a powered ankle exoskeleton with speed-adaptive myoelectric control. Journal of Neuroengineering and Rehabilitation, 16 (1) 57, 57. doi: 10.1186/s12984-019-0523-y

Mechanics and energetics of post-stroke walking aided by a powered ankle exoskeleton with speed-adaptive myoelectric control

Funding

Current funding

  • 2025 - 2028
    A quantum exoGarment for unrivalled measurement of muscle function in sport
    Quantum 2032 Challenge Program
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2025
    Measuring muscle-plasticity following an ankle exoskeleton intervention in people with mobility disorders
    CSIRO
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2026
    Targeted wearable robotic exoskeletons to improve movement in patients with ALS (Assistive Technology Grants)
    Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association (ALSA)
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2026
    Combining biomechanics and movement ecology of kangaroos and relatives (ARC Discovery Project administered by University of the Sunshine Coast)
    University of the Sunshine Coast
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2022 - 2024
    Looking under the hood of elite rowers: skeletal muscle determinants of rowing performance
    Queensland Academy of Sport
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2022
    "Looking inside the muscles": Unravelling the muscle coordination strategies in runners with and without knee pain
    U21 Health Sciences Group Early Career Research Fund
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2022
    Biomechanics Research and Innovation Challenge: 100 girls - 100 stories - 100 days (DSIER Women in STEM and Entrepreneurship Grant administered by University of Canberra)
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2022
    Geared to Row: Determining the Influence of Mechanical Demand and Dynamic Muscle Architecture on Gearing
    Queensland Academy of Sport
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2023
    A step forward against ageing: wearable assistive devices in fit and frailer older people
    Metro South Hospital and Health Service
    Open grant
  • 2019 - 2020
    Dynamic ultrasound imaging to measure in vivo muscle-tendon structure and function and optimize human performance
    Queensland Academy of Sport
    Open grant
  • 2019
    A step forward against ageing: novel wearable assistive devices to enhance mobility
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2018
    Shearwave elastography to quantify impact of age, development and pathology on the neuromuscular system
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Taylor Dick is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Integrating experiments and musculoskeletal simulations to explore non-steady locomotion across scales

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Investigating the neuromuscular and energetic effects of passive exoskeletons

    Principal Advisor

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Closed-loop Functional Electrical Stimulation control using real-time estimation of muscle properties

    Principal Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Antonio Padilha Lanari Bo

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Quantifying Muscle (A)symmetry in Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Kylie Tucker

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Effects of Virtual Perturbations and Visual Illusions on Gait and Balance

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Antonio Padilha Lanari Bo, Dr Nell Baghaei

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Can Minimal Footwear Alter Patellofemoral Joint Loading, Lower-Limb Muscle Activation and Biomechanics During Walking in Individuals with Patellofemoral Osteoarthritis

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Professor Kylie Tucker, Associate Professor Natalie Collins

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Insights into the anticipatory and compensatory postural control of children with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Wolbert van den Hoorn, Professor Kylie Tucker

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Effects of Virtual Perturbations and Visual Illusions on Gait and Balance

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Dr Antonio Padilha Lanari Bo, Dr Nell Baghaei

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Redefining digital technology to provide patient centric platform to meet the need of patients with Motor Neuron Disease

    Associate Advisor

    Other advisors: Associate Professor Shyuan Ngo, Dr Rebecca Packer, Associate Professor Frederik Steyn

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

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