IEEE Open J Eng Med Biol
January 2023
Accounting for gait individuality is important to positive outcomes with wearable robots, but manually tuning multi-activity models is time-consuming and not viable in a clinic. Generalizations can possibly be made to predict gait individuality in unobserved conditions. Kinematic individuality-how one person's joint angles differ from the group-is quantified for every subject, joint, ambulation mode (walking, running, stair ascent, and stair descent), and intramodal task (speed, incline) in an open-access dataset with 10 able-bodied subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman locomotion involves continuously variable activities including walking, running, and stair climbing over a range of speeds and inclinations as well as sit-stand, walk-run, and walk-stairs transitions. Understanding the kinematics and kinetics of the lower limbs during continuously varying locomotion is fundamental to developing robotic prostheses and exoskeletons that assist in community ambulation. However, available datasets on human locomotion neglect transitions between activities and/or continuous variations in speed and inclination during these activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng
December 2020
Transfemoral amputee gait often exhibits compensations due to the lack of ankle push-off power and control over swing foot position using passive prostheses. Powered prostheses can restore this functionality, but their effects on compensatory behaviors, specifically at the residual hip, are not well understood. This paper investigates residual hip compensations through walking experiments with three transfemoral amputees using a low-impedance powered knee-ankle prosthesis compared to their day-to-day passive prosthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc IEEE RAS EMBS Int Conf Biomed Robot Biomechatron
October 2020
Individuality in clinical gait analysis is often quantified by an individual's kinematic deviation from the norm, but it is unclear how these deviations generalize across different walking speeds and ground slopes. Understanding individuality across tasks has important implications in the tuning of prosthetic legs, where clinicians have limited time and resources to personalize the kinematic motion of the leg to therapeutically enhance the wearer's gait. This study seeks to determine an efficient way to predictively model an individual's kinematics over a continuous range of slopes and speeds given only one personalized task at level ground.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough there has been recent progress in control of multi-joint prosthetic legs for rhythmic tasks such as walking, control of these systems for non-rhythmic motions and general real-world maneuvers is still an open problem. In this article, we develop a new controller that is capable of both rhythmic (constant-speed) walking, transitions between speeds and/or tasks, and some common volitional leg motions. We introduce a new piecewise holonomic phase variable, which, through a finite state machine, forms the basis of our controller.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE J Transl Eng Health Med
November 2018
This paper presents a potential solution to the challenge of configuring powered knee-ankle prostheses in a clinical setting. Typically, powered prostheses use impedance-based control schemes that contain several independent controllers which correspond to consecutive periods along the gait cycle. This control strategy has numerous control parameters and switching rules that are generally tuned by researchers or technicians and not by a certified prosthetist.
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