This article offers new insights on the learning control approach developed by [Hu et al. IEEE/ASME Trans. Mechatronics, 19(1): 191-200, 2014]. Theoretical insights are further proposed to unveil why the contraction-type iterative learning control (ILC) schemes are suitable and effective in compensating for hysteresis, widely existing in biorobotic locomotion. Under such circumstances, iteration-based second-order dynamics is adopted to describe the biorobotic systems acted upon by one unknown Preisach hysteresis term. The memory clearing operator is mathematically proven to enable feasibility of contractiontype ILC methods, regardless of whether the initial state is accurately set or not. The simulation examples confirm that the developed iteration-based controller combined with a preceded operator effectively reduce tracking errors caused by the hysteresis nonlinearity. Furthermore, the new insights on theoretical feasibility are definitively corroborated in accordance with the previously published experimental results.