295 research outputs found

    Co-adaptive myoelectric control for upper limb prostheses

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    [ES] Mucha gente en el mundo se ve afectada por la pérdida de una extremidad (las predicciones estiman que en 2050 habrá más de 3 millones de personas afectadas únicamente en los Estados Unidos de América). A pesar de la continua mejora en las técnicas de amputación y la prostética, vivir sin una extremidad sigue limitando las actividades de los afectados en su vida diaria, provocando una disminución en su calidad de vida. En este trabajo nos centramos en los casos de amputaciones de extremidades superiores, entendiendo por ello la pérdida de cualquier parte del brazo o antebrazo. Esta tesis trata sobre el control mioeléctrico (potenciales eléctricos superficiales generados por la contracción de los músculos) de prótesis de extremidades superiores. Los estudios en este campo han crecido exponencialmente en las últimas décadas intentando reducir el hueco entre la parte investigadora más dinámica y propensa a los cambios e innovación (por ejemplo, usando técnicas como la inteligencia artificial) y la industria prostética, con una gran inercia y poco propensa a introducir cambios en sus controladores y dispositivos. El principal objetivo de esta tesis es desarrollar un nuevo controlador implementable basado en filtros adaptativos que supere los principales problemas del estado del arte. Desde el punto de vista teórico, podríamos considerar dos contribuciones principales. Primero, proponemos un nuevo sistema para modelar la relación entre los patrones de la señales mioélectricas y los movimientos deseados; este nuevo modelo tiene en cuenta a la hora de estimar la posición actual el valor de los estados pasados generando una nueva sinergia entre máquina y ser humano. En segundo lugar, introducimos un nuevo paradigma de entrenamiento más eficiente y personalizado autónomamente, el cual puede aplicarse no sólo a nuestro nuevo controlador, sino a otros regresores disponibles en la literatura. Como consecuencia de este nuevo protocolo, la estructura humano-máquina difiere con respecto del actual estado del arte en dos características: el proceso de aprendizaje del controlador y la estrategia para la generación de las señales de entrada. Como consecuencia directa de todo esto, el diseño de la fase experimental resulta mucho más complejo que con los controladores tradicionales. La dependencia de la posición actual de la prótesis con respecto a estados pasados fuerza a la realización de todos los experimentos de validación del nuevo controlador en tiempo real, algo costoso en recursos tanto humanos como de tiempo. Por lo tanto, una gran parte de esta tesis está dedicada al trabajo de campo necesario para validar el nuevo modelo y estrategia de entrenamiento. Como el objetivo final es proveer un nuevo controlador implementable, la última parte de la tesis está destinada a testear los métodos propuestos en casos reales, tanto en entornos simulados para validar su robustez ante rutinas diarias, como su uso en dispositivos prostéticos comerciales. Como conclusión, este trabajo propone un nuevo paradigma de control mioélectrico para prótesis que puede ser implementado en una prótesis real. Una vez se ha demostrado la viabilidad del sistema, la tesis propone futuras líneas de investigación, mostrando algunos resultados iniciales.[CA] Molta gent en el món es veu afectada per la pèrdua d'una extremitat (les prediccions estimen que en 2050 hi haurà més de 3 milions de persones afectades únicament als Estats Units d'Amèrica). Malgrat la contínua millora en les tècniques d'amputació i la prostètica, viure sense una extremitat continua limitant les activitats dels afectats en la seua vida diària, provocant una disminució en la seua qualitat de vida. En aquest treball ens centrem en els casos d'amputacions d'extremitats superiors, entenent per això la pèrdua de qualsevol part del braç o avantbraç. Aquesta tesi tracta sobre el control mioelèctric (potencials elèctrics superficials generats per la contracció dels músculs) de pròtesis d'extremitats superiors. Els estudis en aquest camp han crescut exponencialment en les últimes dècades intentant reduir el buit entre la part investigadora més dinàmica i propensa als canvis i innovació (per exemple, usant tècniques com la intel·ligència artificial) i la indústria prostètica, amb una gran inèrcia i poc propensa a introduir canvis en els seus controladors i dispositius. Aquesta tesi contribueix a la investigació des de diversos punts de vista. El principal objectiu és desenvolupar un nou controlador basat en filtres adaptatius que supere els principals problemes de l'estat de l'art. Des del punt de vista teòric, podríem considerar dues contribucions principals. Primer, proposem un nou sistema per a modelar la relació entre els patrons de la senyals mioelèctrics i els moviments desitjats; aquest nou model té en compte a l'hora d'estimar la posició actual el valor dels estats passats generant una nova sinergia entre màquina i ésser humà. En segon lloc, introduïm un nou paradigma d'entrenament més eficient i personalitzat autònomament, el qual pot aplicar-se no sols al nostre nou controlador, sinó a uns altres regresors disponibles en la literatura. Com a conseqüència d'aquest nou protocol, l'estructura humà-màquina difereix respecte a l'actual estat de l'art en dues característiques: el procés d'aprenentatge del controlador i l'estratègia per a la generació dels senyals d'entrada. Com a conseqüència directa de tot això, el disseny de la fase experimental resulta molt més complex que amb els controladors tradicionals. La dependència de la posició actual de la pròtesi respecte a estats passats força a la realització de tots els experiments de validació del nou controlador en temps real, una cosa costosa en recursos tant humans com de temps. Per tant, una gran part d'aquesta tesi està dedicada al treball de camp necessari per a validar el nou model i estratègia d'entrenament. Com l'objectiu final és proveir un nou controlador implementable, l'última part de la tesi està destinada a testar els mètodes proposats en casos reals, tant en entorns simulats per a validar la seua robustesa davant rutines diàries, com el seu ús en dispositius prostètics comercials. Com a conclusió, aquest treball proposa un nou paradigma de control mioelèctric per a pròtesi que pot ser implementat en una pròtesi real. Una vegada s'ha demostrat la viabilitat del sistema, la tesi proposa futures línies d'investigació, mostrant alguns resultats inicials.[EN] Many people in the world suffer from the loss of a limb (predictions estimate more than 3 million people by 2050 only in the USA). In spite of the continuous improvement in the amputation rehabilitation and prosthetic restoration, living without a limb keeps limiting the daily life activities leading to a lower quality of life. In this work, we focus in the upper limb amputation case, i.e., the removal of any part of the arm or forearm. This thesis is about upper limb prosthesis control using electromyographic signals (the superficial electric potentials generated during muscle contractions). Studies in this field have grown exponentially in the past decades trying to reduce the gap between a fast growing prosthetic research field, with the introduction of machine learning, and a slower prosthetic industry and limited manufacturing innovation. This thesis contributes to the field from different perspectives. The main goal is to provide and implementable new controller based on adaptive filtering that overcomes the most common state of the art concerns. From the theoretical point of view, there are two main contributions. First, we propose a new system to model the relationship between electromyographic signals and the desired prosthesis movements; this new model takes into account previous states for the estimation of the current position generating a new human-machine synergy. Second, we introduce a new and more efficient autonomously personalized training paradigm, which can benefit not only to our new proposed controller but also other state of the art regressors. As a consequence of this new protocol, the human-machine structure differs with respect to current state of the art in two features: the controller learning process and the input signal generation strategy. As a direct aftereffect of all of this, the experimental phase design results more complex than with traditional controllers. The current state dependency on past states forces the experimentation to be in real time, a very high demanding task in human and time resources. Therefore, a major part of this thesis is the associated fieldwork needed to validate the new model and training strategy. Since the final goal is to provide an implementable new controller, the last part of the thesis is devoted to test the proposed methods in real cases, not only analyzing the robustness and reliability of the controller in real life situations but in real prosthetic devices. As a conclusion, this work provides a new paradigm for the myoelectric prosthetic control that can be implemented in a real device. Once the thesis has proven the system's viability, future work should continue with the development of a physical device where all these ideas are deployed and used by final patients in a daily basis.The work of Carles Igual Bañó to carry out this research and elaborate this dissertation has been supported by the Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte under the FPU Grant FPU15/02870. One visiting research fellowships (EST18/00544) was also funded by the Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte of Spain.Igual Bañó, C. (2021). Co-adaptive myoelectric control for upper limb prostheses [Tesis doctoral]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/168192TESI

    Persistence in complex systems

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    Persistence is an important characteristic of many complex systems in nature, related to how long the system remains at a certain state before changing to a different one. The study of complex systems’ persistence involves different definitions and uses different techniques, depending on whether short-term or long-term persistence is considered. In this paper we discuss the most important definitions, concepts, methods, literature and latest results on persistence in complex systems. Firstly, the most used definitions of persistence in short-term and long-term cases are presented. The most relevant methods to characterize persistence are then discussed in both cases. A complete literature review is also carried out. We also present and discuss some relevant results on persistence, and give empirical evidence of performance in different detailed case studies, for both short-term and long-term persistence. A perspective on the future of persistence concludes the work.This research has been partially supported by the project PID2020-115454GB-C21 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN). This research has also been partially supported by Comunidad de Madrid, PROMINT-CM project (grant ref: P2018/EMT-4366). J. Del Ser would like to thank the Basque Government for its funding support through the EMAITEK and ELKARTEK programs (3KIA project, KK-2020/00049), as well as the consolidated research group MATHMODE (ref. T1294-19). GCV work is supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the ERC-CoG-2014 SEDAL Consolidator grant (grant agreement 647423)

    Persistence in complex systems

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    Persistence is an important characteristic of many complex systems in nature, related to how long the system remains at a certain state before changing to a different one. The study of complex systems' persistence involves different definitions and uses different techniques, depending on whether short-term or long-term persistence is considered. In this paper we discuss the most important definitions, concepts, methods, literature and latest results on persistence in complex systems. Firstly, the most used definitions of persistence in short-term and long-term cases are presented. The most relevant methods to characterize persistence are then discussed in both cases. A complete literature review is also carried out. We also present and discuss some relevant results on persistence, and give empirical evidence of performance in different detailed case studies, for both short-term and long-term persistence. A perspective on the future of persistence concludes the work.This research has been partially supported by the project PID2020-115454GB-C21 of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN). This research has also been partially supported by Comunidad de Madrid, PROMINT-CM project (grant ref: P2018/EMT-4366). J. Del Ser would like to thank the Basque Government for its funding support through the EMAITEK and ELKARTEK programs (3KIA project, KK-2020/00049), as well as the consolidated research group MATHMODE (ref. T1294-19). GCV work is supported by the European Research Council (ERC) under the ERC-CoG-2014 SEDAL Consolidator grant (grant agreement 647423)

    Extracting heart rate dependent electrocardiogram templates for a body emulator environment

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    Abstract. Medical device and analysis method developments often include tests on humans, which are expensive, time consuming, and sometimes even dangerous. In order to perform human tests, special safety conditions and ethical and legal requirements must be taken into account. Emulators that can emulate the physiological functions of the human body could solve these difficulties. In this study, the heart rate depended electrocardiogram templates for this kind of an emulator were extracted. The real-life electrocardiogram preprocessing included a high-pass filter and a Savitzky-Golay filter. A beat detection algorithm was developed to detect QRS complexes in the signals and classify beat artefacts based on the RR interval sequences and two adaptive thresholds. Heart rate levels were detected using the K-means clustering technique. Vectorcardiogram signals were converted from the electrocardiogram signals using the inverse Dower’s transformation matrix, and vectorcardiogram templates were extracted to the respective heart rate levels. Finally, a graphical user interface was created for the mentioned methods. The developed beat detection algorithm was tested with the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database and the comparison was made with the state-of-the-art algorithms. The beat detection algorithm resulted the sensitivity of 99.77 \%, precision of 99.65 \%, and detection error rate of 0.58 \%. Based on the results, the proposed methods and extracted vectorcardiogram templates were successful.Sykkeestä riippuvien elektrokardiogrammimallien poiminta kehoemulaattoriympäristöön. Tiivistelmä. Lääketieteellisten laitteiden ja analyysimenetelmien kehitystyö sisältää usein ihmisille suoritettavia testejä, jotka ovat kalliita, aikaa vieviä ja joskus jopa vaarallisia. Ihmiskokeiden toteuttamiseksi on otettava huomioon erityisiä turvallisuusehtoja, sekä eettisiä ja laillisia vaatimuksia. Emulaattorit, jotka pystyvät jäljittelemään ihmiskehon fysiologisia toimintoja, voivat olla ratkaisu näihin ongelmiin. Tässä tutkimuksessa sykkeestä riippuvia elektrokardiogrammimalleja poimittiin tämän tyyppiselle emulaattorille. Tosielämän elektrokardiogrammisignaalien esikäsittely sisälsi ylipäästösuodattimen ja Savitzky-Golay suodattimen. Sydämen lyöntien tunnistussalgoritmi kehitettiin tunnistamaan QRS-komplekseja signaaleista ja luokittelemaan lyöntiartefakteja RR-intervallisekvenssien ja kahden adaptiivisen kynnysarvon perusteella. Syketasot tunnistettiin käyttämällä K-means klusterointitekniikkaa. Vektorikardiogrammisignaalit muunnettiin elektrokardiogrammisignaaleista käyttämällä käänteistä Dowerin muunnosmatriisia ja vektorikardiogrammimallit poimittiin vastaaville syketasoille. Lopuksi luotiin graafnen käyttöliittymä mainituille menetelmille. Kehitetty lyöntien tunnistusalgoritmi testattiin MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database-tietokannalla ja vertailu suoritettiin vastaavien algoritmien kanssa. Algoritmi suoriutui 99,77 % herkkyydellä, 99,65 % spesifsyydellä ja 0,58 % virheprosentilla. Tulosten perusteella ehdotetut menetelmät ja poimitut vektorikardiogrammimallit olivat onnistuneita

    Streamlined design and self reliant hardware for active control of precision space structures

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    Precision space structures may require active vibration control to satisfy critical performance requirements relating to line-of-sight pointing accuracy and the maintenance of precise, internal alignments. In order for vibration control concepts to become operational, it is necessary that their benefits be practically demonstrated in large scale ground-based experiments. A unique opportunity to carry out such demonstrations on a wide variety of experimental testbeds was provided by the NASA Control-Structure Integration (CSI) Guest Investigator (GI) Program. This report surveys the experimental results achieved by the Harris Corporation GI team on both Phases 1 and 2 of the program and provides a detailed description of Phase 2 activities. The Phase 1 results illustrated the effectiveness of active vibration control for space structures and demonstrated a systematic methodology for control design, implementation test. In Phase 2, this methodology was significantly streamlined to yield an on-site, single session design/test capability. Moreover, the Phase 2 research on adaptive neural control techniques made significant progress toward fully automated, self-reliant space structure control systems. As a further thrust toward productized, self-contained vibration control systems, the Harris Phase II activity concluded with experimental demonstration of new vibration isolation hardware suitable for a wide range of space-flight and ground-based commercial applications.The CSI GI Program Phase 1 activity was conducted under contract NASA1-18872, and the Phase 2 activity was conducted under NASA1-19372

    Glottal-synchronous speech processing

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    Glottal-synchronous speech processing is a field of speech science where the pseudoperiodicity of voiced speech is exploited. Traditionally, speech processing involves segmenting and processing short speech frames of predefined length; this may fail to exploit the inherent periodic structure of voiced speech which glottal-synchronous speech frames have the potential to harness. Glottal-synchronous frames are often derived from the glottal closure instants (GCIs) and glottal opening instants (GOIs). The SIGMA algorithm was developed for the detection of GCIs and GOIs from the Electroglottograph signal with a measured accuracy of up to 99.59%. For GCI and GOI detection from speech signals, the YAGA algorithm provides a measured accuracy of up to 99.84%. Multichannel speech-based approaches are shown to be more robust to reverberation than single-channel algorithms. The GCIs are applied to real-world applications including speech dereverberation, where SNR is improved by up to 5 dB, and to prosodic manipulation where the importance of voicing detection in glottal-synchronous algorithms is demonstrated by subjective testing. The GCIs are further exploited in a new area of data-driven speech modelling, providing new insights into speech production and a set of tools to aid deployment into real-world applications. The technique is shown to be applicable in areas of speech coding, identification and artificial bandwidth extension of telephone speec

    Adaptive torque-feedback based engine control

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    The aim of this study was to develop a self-tuning or adaptive SI engine controller using torque feedback as the main control variable, based on direct/indirect measurement and estimation techniques. The indirect methods include in-cylinder pressure measurement, ion current measurement, and crankshaft rotational frequency variation. It is proposed that torque feedback would not only allow the operating set-points to be monitored and achieved under wider conditions (including the extremes of humidity and throttle transients), but to actively select and optimise the set-points on the basis of both performance and fuel economy. A further application could allow the use of multiple fuel types and/or combustion enhancing methods to best effect. An existing experimental facility which comprised a Jaguar AJ-V8 SI engine coupled to a Heenan-Froude Dynamatic GVAL (Mk 1) dynamometer was adopted for this work, in order to provide a flexible distributed engine test system comprising a combined user interface and cylinder pressure monitoring system, a functional dynamometer controller, and a modular engine controller which is close coupled to an embedded PC has been created. The considerable challenges involved in creating this system have meant that the core research objectives of this project have not been met. Nevertheless, an open-architecture software and hardware engine controller and independent throttle controller have been developed, to the point of testing. For the purposes of optimum ignition timing validation and combustion knock detection, an optical cylinder pressure measurement system with crank angle synchronous sampling has been developed. The departure from the project’s initial aims have also highlighted several important aspects of eddy-current dynamometer control, whose closed-loop behaviour was modelled in Simulink to study its control and dynamic response. The design of the dynamometer real-time controller was successfully implemented and evaluated in a more contemporary context using an embedded digital controller.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceSchool of Mechanical & Systems EngineeringNewcastle UniversityGBUnited Kingdo
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