63 research outputs found

    Sensory Augmentation for Balance Rehabilitation Using Skin Stretch Feedback

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    This dissertation focuses on the development and evaluation of portable sensory augmentation systems that render skin-stretch feedback of posture for standing balance training and for postural control improvement. Falling is one of the main causes of fatal injuries among all members of the population. The high incidence of fall-related injuries also leads to high medical expenses, which cost approximately $34 billion annually in the United States. People with neurological diseases, e.g., stroke, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injuries, and the elderly are more prone to falling when compared to healthy individuals. Falls among these populations can also lead to hip fracture, or even death. Thus, several balance and gait rehabilitation approaches have been developed to reduce the risk of falling. Traditionally, a balance-retraining program includes a series of exercises for trainees to strengthen their sensorimotor and musculoskeletal systems. Recent advances in technology have incorporated biofeedback such as visual, auditory, or haptic feedback to provide the users with extra cues about their postural sway. Studies have also demonstrated the positive effects of biofeedback on balance control. However, current applications of biofeedback for interventions in people with impaired balance are still lacking some important characteristics such as portability (in-home care), small-size, and long-term viability. Inspired by the concept of light touch, a light, small, and wearable sensory augmentation system that detects body sway and supplements skin stretch on one’s fingertip pad was first developed. The addition of a shear tactile display could significantly enhance the sensation to body movement. Preliminary results have shown that the application of passive skin stretch feedback at the fingertip enhanced standing balance of healthy young adults. Based on these findings, two research directions were initiated to investigate i) which dynamical information of postural sway could be more effectively conveyed by skin stretch feedback, and ii) how can such feedback device be easily used in the clinical setting or on a daily basis. The major sections of this research are focused on understanding how the skin stretch feedback affects the standing balance and on quantifying the ability of humans to interpret the cutaneous feedback as the cues of their physiological states. Experimental results from both static and dynamic balancing tasks revealed that healthy subjects were able to respond to the cues and subsequently correct their posture. However, it was observed that the postural sway did not generally improve in healthy subjects due to skin stretch feedback. A possible reason was that healthy subjects already had good enough quality sensory information such that the additional artificial biofeedback may have interfered with other sensory cues. Experiments incorporating simulated sensory deficits were further conducted and it was found that subjects with perturbed sensory systems (e.g., unstable surface) showed improved balance due to skin stretch feedback when compared to the neutral standing conditions. Positive impacts on balance performance have also been demonstrated among multiple sclerosis patients when they receive skin stretch feedback from a sensory augmentation walker. The findings in this research indicated that the skin stretch feedback rendered by the developed devices affected the human balance and can potentially compensate underlying neurological or musculoskeletal disorders, therefore enhancing quiet standing postural control

    Fast Sensing and Adaptive Actuation for Robust Legged Locomotion

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    Robust legged locomotion in complex terrain demands fast perturbation detection and reaction. In animals, due to the neural transmission delays, the high-level control loop involving the brain is absent from mitigating the initial disturbance. Instead, the low-level compliant behavior embedded in mechanics and the mid-level controllers in the spinal cord are believed to provide quick response during fast locomotion. Still, it remains unclear how these low- and mid-level components facilitate robust locomotion. This thesis aims to identify and characterize the underlining elements responsible for fast sensing and actuation. To test individual elements and their interplay, several robotic systems were implemented. The implementations include active and passive mechanisms as a combination of elasticities and dampers in multi-segment robot legs, central pattern generators inspired by intraspinal controllers, and a synthetic robotic version of an intraspinal sensor. The first contribution establishes the notion of effective damping. Effective damping is defined as the total energy dissipation during one step, which allows quantifying how much ground perturbation is mitigated. Using this framework, the optimal damper is identified as viscous and tunable. This study paves the way for integrating effective dampers to legged designs for robust locomotion. The second contribution introduces a novel series elastic actuation system. The proposed system tackles the issue of power transmission over multiple joints, while featuring intrinsic series elasticity. The design is tested on a hopper with two more elastic elements, demonstrating energy recuperation and enhanced dynamic performance. The third contribution proposes a novel tunable damper and reveals its influence on legged hopping. A bio-inspired slack tendon mechanism is implemented in parallel with a spring. The tunable damping is rigorously quantified on a central-pattern-generator-driven hopping robot, which reveals the trade-off between locomotion robustness and efficiency. The last contribution explores the intraspinal sensing hypothesis of birds. We speculate that the observed intraspinal structure functions as an accelerometer. This accelerometer could provide fast state feedback directly to the adjacent central pattern generator circuits, contributing to birds’ running robustness. A biophysical simulation framework is established, which provides new perspectives on the sensing mechanics of the system, including the influence of morphologies and material properties. Giving an overview of the hierarchical control architecture, this thesis investigates the fast sensing and actuation mechanisms in several control layers, including the low-level mechanical response and the mid-level intraspinal controllers. The contributions of this work provide new insight into animal loco-motion robustness and lays the foundation for future legged robot design

    Proceedings of the ECCOMAS Thematic Conference on Multibody Dynamics 2015

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    This volume contains the full papers accepted for presentation at the ECCOMAS Thematic Conference on Multibody Dynamics 2015 held in the Barcelona School of Industrial Engineering, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, on June 29 - July 2, 2015. The ECCOMAS Thematic Conference on Multibody Dynamics is an international meeting held once every two years in a European country. Continuing the very successful series of past conferences that have been organized in Lisbon (2003), Madrid (2005), Milan (2007), Warsaw (2009), Brussels (2011) and Zagreb (2013); this edition will once again serve as a meeting point for the international researchers, scientists and experts from academia, research laboratories and industry working in the area of multibody dynamics. Applications are related to many fields of contemporary engineering, such as vehicle and railway systems, aeronautical and space vehicles, robotic manipulators, mechatronic and autonomous systems, smart structures, biomechanical systems and nanotechnologies. The topics of the conference include, but are not restricted to: ● Formulations and Numerical Methods ● Efficient Methods and Real-Time Applications ● Flexible Multibody Dynamics ● Contact Dynamics and Constraints ● Multiphysics and Coupled Problems ● Control and Optimization ● Software Development and Computer Technology ● Aerospace and Maritime Applications ● Biomechanics ● Railroad Vehicle Dynamics ● Road Vehicle Dynamics ● Robotics ● Benchmark ProblemsPostprint (published version
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