DocumentCode
953748
Title
User-Modulated Impedance Control of a Prosthetic Elbow in Unconstrained, Perturbed Motion
Author
Sensinger, Jonathon W. ; Weir, Richard F ff
Author_Institution
Rehabilitation Inst. of Chicago, Chicago
Volume
55
Issue
3
fYear
2008
fDate
3/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1043
Lastpage
1055
Abstract
Humans use the agonist-antagonist structure of their muscles to simultaneously determine both the motion and the stiffness of their joints. Designing this feature into an artificial limb may prove advantageous. To evaluate the performance of an artificial limb capable of modulating its impedance, we have created a compact series elastic actuator that has the same size and similar weight as commercially available electric prosthetic elbows. The inherent compliance in series elastic actuators ensure their safety to the user, even at high speeds, while creating a high-fidelity force actuator ideally suited for impedance control. This paper describes three serial studies that build on each other. The first study presents modeling of the actuator to ensure stability in the range of impedance modulation and empirically tests the actuator to validate its ability to modulate impedance. The actuator is found to be stable and accurate over a wide range of impedances. In the second study, four subjects are tested in a preliminary experiment to answer basic questions necessary to implement user-modulated impedance control. Findings include the superiority of velocity control over position control as the underlying motion paradigm and the preference for high stiffness and non-negative inertia. Based on the findings of the second study, the third study evaluates the performance of 15 able-bodied subjects for two tasks, using five different impedance paradigms. Impedance modulation, speed, and error were compared across paradigms. The results indicate that subjects do not actively modulate impedance if it is near a preferred baseline. Fixed impedance and viscosity modulation provide the most accurate control.
Keywords
artificial limbs; electric actuators; electromyography; medical control systems; EMG signal; agonist-antagonist structure; artificial limb; electric prosthetic elbow; high-fidelity force actuator; muscles; perturbed unconstrained motion; series elastic actuator; user-modulated impedance control; viscosity modulation; Actuators; Artificial limbs; Elbow; Humans; Impedance; Motion control; Muscles; Prosthetics; Safety; Testing; Artificial limb; Elastic Actuator; Impedance Control; artificial limb; impedance control; prosthesis; series elastic actuator; Algorithms; Artificial Limbs; Computer Simulation; Elbow; Electric Impedance; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Feedback; Humans; Joint Prosthesis; Models, Biological; Therapy, Computer-Assisted;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2007.905385
Filename
4360112
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