Functional electrical stimulation (FES) has recently been proposed as a supplementary torque assist in lower-limb powered exoskeletons for persons with paraplegia. In the combined system, also known as a hybrid neuroprosthesis, both FES-assist and the exoskeleton act to generate lower-limb torques to achieve standing and walking functions. Due to this actuator redundancy, we are motivated to optimally allocate FES-assist and exoskeleton torque based on a performance index that penalizes FES overuse to minimize muscle fatigue while also minimizing regulation or tracking errors. Traditional optimal control approaches need a system model to optimize; however, it is often difficult to formulate a musculoskeletal model that accurately predicts muscle responses due to FES. In this paper, we use a novel identification and control structure that contains a recurrent neural network (RNN) and several feedforward neural networks (FNNs). The RNN is trained by supervised learning to identify the system dynamics, while the FNNs are trained by a reinforcement learning method to provide sub-optimal control actions. The output layer of each FNN has its unique activation functions, so that the asymmetric constraint of FES and the symmetric constraint of exoskeleton motor control input can be realized. This new structure is experimentally validated on a seated human participant using a single joint hybrid neuroprosthesis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s41315-019-00100-8 | DOI Listing |
Front Robot AI
January 2025
Australian Centre For Robotics (ACFR), University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
This paper presents methods for finding optimal configurations and actuator forces/torques to maximise contact wrenches in a desired direction for underwater vehicle manipulator systems (UVMS). The wrench maximisation problem is formulated as a bi-level optimisation problem, with upper-level variables in a low-dimensional parameterised redundancy space, and a linear lower-level problem. We additionally consider the cases of one or more manipulators with multiple contact forces, maximising the wrench capability while tracking a trajectory and generating large wrench impulses using dynamic motions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
February 2025
State Key Laboratory of Fluid Power Components and Mechatronic Systems, School of Mechanical Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China.
Emerging soft systems, including soft robots or wearable devices, actuated by fluidic means facilitate a series of inherent benefits, including safe human-robot interactions, lower costs, and adaptability in geometry for manipulating delicate objects. However, existing fluidic soft systems are facing a critical barrier: how to get rid of traditional rigid, bulky, and redundant fluid power/control components as well as develop their own flexible, portable, and universal fluidic components for implementing fully flexible, multi-circuit, and untethered autonomous systems. Here, we introduce a strategy of flexible electro-hydraulic power chips that enables multi-circuit independent pumping and control of soft systems in simple, compact, and lightweight forms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinspir Biomim
February 2025
Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, ISM, Marseille, France.
Skeletal muscle is the main actuator of various families of vertebrates (mammals, fish, reptiles). It displays remarkable robustness to micro-damage, that supposedly originates both from its redundant hierarchical structure and its nervous command. A bioinspired mock-up was designed and manufactured mimicking sarcomeres (micro-scale) and its series and parallel structure from fibre to muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Robot AI
January 2025
Neuro-robotics Laboratory, Department of Robotics, Graduate School of Engineering, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.
Reliable proprioception and feedback from soft sensors are crucial for enabling soft robots to function intelligently in real-world environments. Nevertheless, soft sensors are fragile and are susceptible to various damage sources in such environments. Some researchers have utilized redundant configuration, where healthy sensors compensate instantaneously for lost ones to maintain proprioception accuracy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomimetics (Basel)
September 2024
Laboratory of Mechatronics, Xi'an College of Technology, Xi'an 710025, China.
A spatial redundantly actuated parallel mechanism (RAPM) constrained by two point contact higher kinematic pairs (HKPs) has been designed, arising from the inspiration of mastication in human beings: the end effector is the lower jaw, the six kinematic chains are the primary chewing muscles, and the constraints at HKPs are the temporomandibular joints. In this paper, firstly, the constrained motions of the mechanism are described in detail; thereafter, five models are formulated by the well-known Newton-Euler's law, the Lagrangian equations, and the principle of virtual work, to explore its rigid-body inverse dynamics. The symbolic results show that the model structures based on these approaches are quite different: the model via the Newton-Euler law well reflects the nature of the mechanism in terms of the constraint forces from HKPs with six equations and eight unknowns, and the existence of reaction forces at the spherical joints is tightly dependent on the number of kinematic chains.
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