| Literature DB >> 22368465 |
Antonio J del-Ama1, Juan C Moreno, Angel Gil-Agudo, Ana de-los-Reyes, José L Pons.
Abstract
Restoration of walking ability of Spinal Cord Injury subjects can be achieved by different approaches, as the use of robotic exoskeletons or electrical stimulation of the user's muscles. The combined (hybrid) approach has the potential to provide a solution to the drawback of each approach. Specific challenges must be addressed with specific sensory systems and control strategies. In this paper we present a system and a procedure to estimate muscle fatigue from online physical interaction assessment to provide hybrid control of walking, regarding the performances of the muscles under stimulation.Entities:
Keywords: exoskeleton; functional electrical stimulation; gait; human-robot interaction; hybrid control; muscle fatigue
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22368465 PMCID: PMC3279209 DOI: 10.3390/s120100215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.Hybrid exoskeleton prototype. (a) Real prototype; (b) Scheme of the sensory system.
Figure 2.Force sensor. (a) FEM analysis result: maximum deformation during extension; (b) Actual sensor: full bridge implementation.
Figure 3.Hybrid control architecture.
Figure 4.Experiment setup.
Figure 5.Knee joint kinematics and interaction torque during an experiment. (a) Middle cycles of the experiment; (b) Last cycles of the experiment.
Figure 6.Mean interaction torque.
Figure 7.Muscle fatigue estimation metrics.
Linear fit coefficients.
| Flexion | 0.0031 Nm/cycle |
| Extension (abs.) | 0.0032 Nm/cycle |