DocumentCode
1424173
Title
Design, control, and characterization of a sliding linear investigative platform for analyzing lower limb stability (SLIP-FALLS)
Author
Robinson, Charles J. ; Purucker, Michael C. ; Faulkner, Lawrence W.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Health & Rehabilitation Sci., Pittsburgh Univ., PA, USA
Volume
6
Issue
3
fYear
1998
fDate
9/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
334
Lastpage
350
Abstract
A novel device, the Sliding Linear Investigative Platform For Analyzing Lower Limb Stability (SLIP-FALLS), has been designed to study the detection and discrimination thresholds of humans to uniaxial horizontal step, ramp, or sinusoidal translations of the surface upon which they stand or stride. The device also can be used to test the human potential for, and mechanisms of, slips and falls. The SLIP utilizes air bearing technology and a noncontact linear motor to produce ultra-low-vibration translations. The FALLS system measures the forces on four load cells, platform linear and head tri-axial accelerations, four channels of electromyographic data, motor voltage, and a subject´s psychophysical response; and derives other physiological and biomechanical measures, like center-of-pressure and shear force. The effect of acceleration and shear force on the accuracy of the center-of-pressure calculations is presented. Operating ranges depend on the interactions among displacement, velocity, acceleration, and jerk parameters for linear translations, and between amplitudes and frequencies for sinusoidal translations. Displacements from 5 μm to 0.277 m, velocities from 5 μm/s to 0.3 m/s, and accelerations up to 2.5 m/s2 are achievable with precise control (i.e., without overshoot), but tradeoffs exist such that all three maxima cannot be reached simultaneously. For a 0.15 m/s linear translation at 4 m/s2 , SLIP-FALLS produces substantially less vibration than the worm-driven NeuroTest system. The usefulness of having precise control over movement parameters is discussed
Keywords
biocontrol; biomechanics; biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; mechanical stability; mechanical variables control; mechanical variables measurement; 5 mum to 0.277 m; SLIP-FALLS; acceleration; biomechanical measures; center-of-pressure; detection thresholds; discrimination thresholds; displacement; human motion control; jerk parameters; lower limb stability analysis; movement parameters; neurological testing; precise control; psychophysical response; ramp translations; shear force; sinusoidal translations; sliding linear investigative platform; stand; stride; uniaxial horizontal step translations; velocity; worm-driven NeuroTest system; Acceleration; Displacement control; Force measurement; Frequency; Humans; Psychology; Stability analysis; Testing; Velocity control; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1063-6528
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/86.712232
Filename
712232
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