DocumentCode
1122015
Title
A Novel Method for Automatic Treadmill Speed Adaptation
Author
Von Zitzewitz, Joachim ; Bernhardt, Michael ; Riener, Robert
Author_Institution
ETH Zurich, Zurich
Volume
15
Issue
3
fYear
2007
Firstpage
401
Lastpage
409
Abstract
Robot-aided treadmill training is an innovative rehabilitation method for patients with locomotor dysfunctions. However, in current rehabilitation systems treadmill speed is restricted to constant values or adjusted by the therapist, whereas self-determined phases of accelerations and decelerations cannot be performed by the patient in an interactive and intuitive way. We present a new approach that allows treadmill walking with intuitive gait speed adaptation. In this approach, the user´s trunk position is fixed in walking direction. The horizontal interaction forces applied by the user intending to accelerate or decelerate the gait are measured at the trunk connection and fed to the treadmill controller. The desired gait acceleration is calculated by means of a virtual admittance. Integration yields the desired speed which is fed into the underlying velocity controller of the treadmill. The method was verified by two experimental setups and tested on ten healthy subjects. In one setup, the subject´s trunk was rigidly connected by a tether, whereas in the second setup the subject was placed in a robotic gait orthosis. All subjects were able to use both systems immediately and intuitively. The treadmill speed profile during the gait cycle corresponds to that of normal walking. The controller can be extended to simulate different walking conditions, such as slope walking. The method can be used for patient-cooperative control strategies performed with a robotic gait orthosis as well as for any other user-interactive applications in fitness and sports.
Keywords
biomedical engineering; medical control systems; medical robotics; patient rehabilitation; automatic treadmill speed adaptation; horizontal interaction forces; intuitive gait speed adaptation; locomotor dysfunctions; patient rehabilitation method; patient-cooperative control strategies; robot-aided treadmill training; robotic gait orthosis; treadmill walking; Admittance control; force feedback; gait therapy; haptic interfaces; locomotion interfaces; neuro-rehabilitation; robotics; treadmill training; Adult; Algorithms; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Exercise Test; Gait Disorders, Neurologic; Humans; Male; Man-Machine Systems; Middle Aged; Robotics; Therapy, Computer-Assisted;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2007.903926
Filename
4303114
Link To Document