DocumentCode
4940
Title
On the Effect of Muscular Cocontraction on the 3-D Human Arm Impedance
Author
Patel, Harshida ; O´Neill, Gerald ; Artemiadis, Panagiotis
Author_Institution
Ira A. Fulton Schools of Eng., Arizona State Univ., Tempe, AZ, USA
Volume
61
Issue
10
fYear
2014
fDate
Oct. 2014
Firstpage
2602
Lastpage
2608
Abstract
Humans have the inherent ability to perform highly dexterous tasks with their arms, involving maintenance of posture, movement, and interaction with the environment. The latter requires the human to control the dynamic characteristics of the upper limb musculoskeletal system. These characteristics are quantitatively represented by inertia, damping, and stiffness, which are measures of mechanical impedance. Many previous studies have shown that arm posture is a dominant factor in determining the end point impedance on a horizontal plane. This paper presents the characterization of the end point impedance of the human arm in 3-D space. Moreover, it models the regulation of the arm impedance with muscle cocontraction. The characterization is made by route of experimental trials where human subjects maintained arm posture while their arms were perturbed by a robot arm. Furthermore, the subjects were asked to control the level of their arm muscles´ cocontraction, using visual feedback, in order to investigate the effect of muscle cocontraction on the arm impedance. The results of this study show an anisotropic increase of arm stiffness due to muscle cocontraction. These results could improve our understanding of the human arm biomechanics, as well as provide implications for human motor control-specifically the control of arm impedance through muscle cocontraction.
Keywords
biomechanics; damping; elastic constants; electric impedance; electromyography; medical signal processing; 3D human arm impedance; arm muscle cocontraction; arm stiffness; damping; dynamic characteristics; electromyography; end point impedance; environment interaction; highly dexterous tasks; human arm biomechanics; human motor control; inertia; mechanical impedance; muscular cocontraction effect; posture maintenance; upper limb musculoskeletal system; visual feedback; Couplings; Ellipsoids; Impedance; Indexes; Muscles; Robots; Three-dimensional displays; Arm impedance; exoskeleton control; muscle cocontraction;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2014.2323938
Filename
6815663
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