| Literature DB >> 34033531 |
Dawit Lee, Bailey Jaymes Mclain, Inseung Kang, Aaron Young.
Abstract
Despite there being studies that have investigated the effects of human augmentation using a knee exoskeleton, comparing different assistance schemes on a single knee exoskeleton has not been studied. Using a light-weight, low-profile bilateral knee exoskeleton system, this study examined and compared the biomechanical effects of three common assistance strategies (biological torque, impedance, and proportional myoelectric controllers) exhibiting different levels of flexibility for the user to control the assistance. Nine subjects walked on a 15% gradient incline surface at 1.1 m/s in the three powered conditions and with the exoskeleton unpowered. All the assistance strategies significantly reduced the metabolic cost of the users compared to the unpowered condition by 3.0% on average across strategies (p < 0.05), led by the significant reduction in the biological knee kinetic effort and knee extensor muscle activation (p < 0.05). Between assistance strategies, the metabolic cost and biomechanics displayed no statistically significant differences. The metabolic and biomechanical results indicate that powered extension assistance during early stance can improve performance compared to the unpowered condition. However, the users ability to control the assistance may not be significant for human augmentation when walking on an inclined surface with a knee exoskeleton.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34033531 DOI: 10.1109/TBME.2021.3083580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ISSN: 0018-9294 Impact factor: 4.538