During physiological gait, humans continuously modulate their knee stiffness, depending on the demands of the activity and the terrain. A similar functionality could be provided by modern actuators in transfemoral prosthesis. However, quantitative data on how knee stiffness is modulated during physiological gait is still missing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring natural locomotion, the stiffness of the human knee is modulated continuously and subconsciously according to the demands of activity and terrain. Given modern actuator technology, powered transfemoral prostheses could theoretically provide a similar degree of sophistication and function. However, experimentally quantifying knee stiffness modulation during natural gait is challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKnee joint impedance varies substantially during physiological gait. Quantifying this modulation is critical for the design of transfemoral prostheses that aim to mimic physiological limb behavior. Conventional methods for quantifying joint impedance typically involve perturbing the joint in a controlled manner, and describing impedance as the dynamic relationship between applied perturbations and corresponding joint torques.
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