30 research outputs found

    Bipedal Walking Analysis, Control, and Applications Towards Human-Like Behavior

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    Realizing the essentials of bipedal walking balance is one of the core studies in both robotics and biomechanics. Although the recent developments of walking control on bipedal robots have brought the humanoid automation to a different level, the walking performance is still limited compared to human walking, which also restricts the related applications in biomechanics and rehabilitation. To mitigate the discrepancy between robotic walking and human walking, this dissertation is broken into three parts to develop the control methods to improve three important perspectives: predictive walking behavior, gait optimization, and stepping strategy. To improve the predictive walking behavior captured by the model predictive control (MPC) which is transitionally applied with the nonlinear tracking control in sequence, a quadratic program (QP)-based controller is proposed to unify center of mass (COM) planning using MPC and a nonlinear torque control with control Lyapunov function (CLF). For the gait optimization, we focus on the algorithms of trajectory optimization with direct collocation framework. We propose a robust trajectory optimization using step-time sampling for a simple walker under terrain uncertainties. Towards generating human-like walking gait with multi-domain (phases), we improve the optimization through contact with more accurate transcription method for level walking, and generalize the hybrid zero dynamics (HZD) gait optimization with modified contact conditions for walking on various terrains. The results are compared with human walking gaits, where the similar trends and the sources of discrepancies are identified. In the third part for stepping strategy, we perform step estimation based on capture point (CP) for different human movements, including single-step (balance) recovery, walking and walking with slip. The analysis provides the insights of the efficacy and limitation of CP-based step estimation for human gait

    Bipedal Walking Analysis, Control, and Applications Towards Human-Like Behavior

    Get PDF
    Realizing the essentials of bipedal walking balance is one of the core studies in both robotics and biomechanics. Although the recent developments of walking control on bipedal robots have brought the humanoid automation to a different level, the walking performance is still limited compared to human walking, which also restricts the related applications in biomechanics and rehabilitation. To mitigate the discrepancy between robotic walking and human walking, this dissertation is broken into three parts to develop the control methods to improve three important perspectives: predictive walking behavior, gait optimization, and stepping strategy. To improve the predictive walking behavior captured by the model predictive control (MPC) which is transitionally applied with the nonlinear tracking control in sequence, a quadratic program (QP)-based controller is proposed to unify center of mass (COM) planning using MPC and a nonlinear torque control with control Lyapunov function (CLF). For the gait optimization, we focus on the algorithms of trajectory optimization with direct collocation framework. We propose a robust trajectory optimization using step-time sampling for a simple walker under terrain uncertainties. Towards generating human-like walking gait with multi-domain (phases), we improve the optimization through contact with more accurate transcription method for level walking, and generalize the hybrid zero dynamics (HZD) gait optimization with modified contact conditions for walking on various terrains. The results are compared with human walking gaits, where the similar trends and the sources of discrepancies are identified. In the third part for stepping strategy, we perform step estimation based on capture point (CP) for different human movements, including single-step (balance) recovery, walking and walking with slip. The analysis provides the insights of the efficacy and limitation of CP-based step estimation for human gait

    Impact of Ear Occlusion on In-Ear Sounds Generated by Intra-oral Behaviors

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    We conducted a case study with one volunteer and a recording setup to detect sounds induced by the actions: jaw clenching, tooth grinding, reading, eating, and drinking. The setup consisted of two in-ear microphones, where the left ear was semi-occluded with a commercially available earpiece and the right ear was occluded with a mouldable silicon ear piece. Investigations in the time and frequency domains demonstrated that for behaviors such as eating, tooth grinding, and reading, sounds could be recorded with both sensors. For jaw clenching, however, occluding the ear with a mouldable piece was necessary to enable its detection. This can be attributed to the fact that the mouldable ear piece sealed the ear canal and isolated it from the environment, resulting in a detectable change in pressure. In conclusion, our work suggests that detecting behaviors such as eating, grinding, reading with a semi-occluded ear is possible, whereas, behaviors such as clenching require the complete occlusion of the ear if the activity should be easily detectable. Nevertheless, the latter approach may limit real-world applicability because it hinders the hearing capabilities.</p

    MUSME 2011 4 th International Symposium on Multibody Systems and Mechatronics

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    El libro de actas recoge las aportaciones de los autores a través de los correspondientes artículos a la Dinámica de Sistemas Multicuerpo y la Mecatrónica (Musme). Estas disciplinas se han convertido en una importante herramienta para diseñar máquinas, analizar prototipos virtuales y realizar análisis CAD sobre complejos sistemas mecánicos articulados multicuerpo. La dinámica de sistemas multicuerpo comprende un gran número de aspectos que incluyen la mecánica, dinámica estructural, matemáticas aplicadas, métodos de control, ciencia de los ordenadores y mecatrónica. Los artículos recogidos en el libro de actas están relacionados con alguno de los siguientes tópicos del congreso: Análisis y síntesis de mecanismos ; Diseño de algoritmos para sistemas mecatrónicos ; Procedimientos de simulación y resultados ; Prototipos y rendimiento ; Robots y micromáquinas ; Validaciones experimentales ; Teoría de simulación mecatrónica ; Sistemas mecatrónicos ; Control de sistemas mecatrónicosUniversitat Politècnica de València (2011). MUSME 2011 4 th International Symposium on Multibody Systems and Mechatronics. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/13224Archivo delegad

    Design and Evaluation of Elastic Exoskeletons for Human Running

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    Humans bounce along the ground when they hop and run, providing spring-like function with their muscles and tendons. Compliant elastic mechanisms could assist this motion by contributing additional elastic storage and return. This in turn would decrease the demands on the human leg, making it easier to hop or run. I developed an elastic knee brace and an elastic lower limb exoskeleton that add parallel stiffness to the human knee joint and entire leg, respectively. The objective of this dissertation was to determine how humans are affected by the parallel elasticity when they hop and run. In the elastic knee orthosis study, ten subjects hopped on one leg with and without stiffness added in parallel to the knee. The mean brace stiffness was 5.6 N-m/â—¦, effectively 31.5% of total knee stiffness when hopping in this condition. When subjects hopped at fixed (2.2 Hz) and preferred frequencies, knee extensor muscle activation levels and biological knee stiffness decreased (P < .05). This indicated that elastic knee exoskeletons could be effective at reducing the metabolic cost of locomotion in bouncing gaits. However, this study also identified critical shortcomings to a joint-based approach for exoskeletons that assist running. The elastic whole limb exoskeleton was used to explore effects of adding parallel leg elasticity with a non-joint-based system. Six subjects ran with and without the exoskeleton at 2.3 m/s. While running in the exoskeleton there was a significant increase in metabolic cost as well as hip flexor and extensor muscle activation levels during the swing phase (P < .0001). The exoskeleton was designed to provide 30-50% of leg stiffness in two conditions. While running, the exoskeleton provided only 18.4% and 19.2% of leg stiffness, and only 7.0% and 7.2% of the peak vertical force transmitted to the ground. This discrepancy was due to motion of the exoskeleton waist harness on subjects and controller functionality. This dissertation provides clear suggestions for design of future exoskeletons that could assist with human running. It is expected that future devices that build on the successes of these prototypes will benefit healthy individuals and those with decreased muscle function.Ph.D.Mechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75905/1/mscherry_1.pd

    Weighing weight : effect of below-knee prosthetic inertial properties on gait

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    In this thesis, the influence of prosthetic inertial properties (mass, mass distribution and moment of inertia) on the gait of transtibial amputation (TTA) subjects is studied. Chapter 1 introduces the present ideas on prosthetic mass. It describes that the general design effort has always been, and still is, to reduce prosthetic mass. However, as far as we know, lightweight design has never been advocated in the present literature. The Chapter introduces the opposite view, found in a relatively large body of literature, that lightweight design might not be beneficial for prosthetic gait. The aim of this thesis, therefore, is to determine the optimal inertial properties of the prosthetic leg

    Model-Based Optimization for the Analysis of Human Movement and the Design of Rehabilitation Devices

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    Human motions result from a complex and well-coordinated interaction between the body segments. Walking and the sit-to-stand transfer are amongst the most challenging human motion in terms of coordination and internal loads, respectively. We propose model-based nonlinear optimal control methods to reconstruct and synthesize these motions while considering the dynamics of the motion over the whole time horizon. The redundant and highly nonlinear character of the computed motions encourages to discretize the optimization problem according to direct multiple-shooting methods. The goal is to identify principles which enable us to describe the patterns of these motions. We approach human walking from the perspective of unimpaired subjects and subjects walking with unilateral transfemoral prostheses. Their walking motion is reconstructed from motion capture data using subject-specific threedimensional multibody models. The motion of the models is fitted to the recorded data for a whole stride in a least-squares sense in multi-stage optimal control problems. Analyzing the reconstructed motion for the individual foot placement of the subjects suggests that it relates with the Capturability concept: foot locations are chosen by the subjects which enable a balance between the inherently conflicting goals of effortless progression and quick response to perturbations. In addition, the modulation of the ground collision impact forces at heel strike is found to play a major role in the step-by-step stability strategy. Based on these findings, we propose Capturability as a complementary criterion to the established clinical stability assessment methods. The sit-to-stand motion is particularly demanding for humans with mobility impairments, due to the high joint loads required to lift the body into the standing pose. We synthesize optimal sit-to-stand by solving two-stage optimal control problems. We presume that the sit-to-stand motion is substantially characterized by a preparation phase prior to the actual lift-off. Full body models are established with dynamic model parameters which specifically represent elderly humans from different levels of mobility. For impaired subjects, mobility support is assumed to be provided by generic support actions. The optimization computations result in different patterns which include significant arm motion in both phases. Therefore, the results support our approach to choose a full body representation of the human as well as to consider two stages in the optimal control problem. The computation of optimal assisted sit-to-stand motions of impaired humans offers the opportunity to optimize design parameters for mobility assistance devices providing adequate support. Based on the support actions for the sit-to-stand motions computed for two different levels of impairment, optimal mechanical design parameters for two different sit-to-stand assistance devices are generated. Our approach to separate the human-device interaction at their interface ensures that the optimal support provided to the human by the device is not compromised by any dynamic coupling between them. Solving large-scale nonlinear optimal control problems with multiple stages, we obtain design parameters for the devices which are optimal in terms of the workspace and the mechanical effort required

    Robotics 2010

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    Without a doubt, robotics has made an incredible progress over the last decades. The vision of developing, designing and creating technical systems that help humans to achieve hard and complex tasks, has intelligently led to an incredible variety of solutions. There are barely technical fields that could exhibit more interdisciplinary interconnections like robotics. This fact is generated by highly complex challenges imposed by robotic systems, especially the requirement on intelligent and autonomous operation. This book tries to give an insight into the evolutionary process that takes place in robotics. It provides articles covering a wide range of this exciting area. The progress of technical challenges and concepts may illuminate the relationship between developments that seem to be completely different at first sight. The robotics remains an exciting scientific and engineering field. The community looks optimistically ahead and also looks forward for the future challenges and new development

    Towards Safe Autonomy in Assistive Robots

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    Robots have the potential to support older adults and persons with disabilities on a direct and personal level. For example, a wearable robot may help a person stand up from a chair, or a robotic manipulator may aid a person with meal preparation and housework. Assistive robots can autonomously make decisions about how best to support a person. However, this autonomy is potentially dangerous; robots can cause collisions or falls which may lead to serious injury. Therefore, guaranteeing that assistive robots operate safely is imperative. This dissertation advances safe autonomy in assistive robots by developing a suite of tools for the tasks of perception, monitoring, manipulation and all prevention. Each tool provides a theoretical guarantee of its correct performance, adding a necessary layer of trust and protection when deploying assistive robots. The topic of interaction, or how a human responds to the decisions made by assistive robots, is left for future work. Perception: Assistive robots must accurately perceive the 3D position of a person's body to avoid collisions and build predictive models of how a person moves. This dissertation formulates the problem of 3D pose estimation from multi-view 2D pose estimates as a sum-of-squares optimization problem. Sparsity is leveraged to efficiently solve the problem, which includes explicit constraints on the link lengths connecting any two joints. The method certifies the global optimality of its solutions over 99 percent of the time, and matches or exceeds state-of-the-art accuracy while requiring less computation time and no 3D training data. Monitoring: Assistive robots may mitigate fall risk by monitoring changes to a person’s stability over time and predicting instabilities in real time. This dissertation presents Stability Basins which characterize stability during human motion, with a focus on sit-to-stand. An 11-person experiment was conducted in which subjects were pulled by motor-driven cables as they stood from a chair. Stability Basins correctly predicted instability (stepping or sitting) versus task success with over 90 percent accuracy across three distinct sit-to-stand strategies. Manipulation: Robotic manipulators can support many common activities like feeding, dressing, and cleaning. This dissertation details ARMTD (Autonomous Reachability-based Manipulator Trajectory Design) for receding-horizon planning of collision-free manipulator trajectories. ARMTD composes reachable sets of the manipulator through workspace from low dimensional trajectories of each joint. ARMTD creates strict collision-avoidance constraints from these sets, which are enforced within an online trajectory optimization. The method is demonstrated for real-time planning in simulation and on hardware on a Fetch Mobile Manipulator robot, where it never causes a collision. Fall Prevention: Wearable robots may prevent falls by quickly reacting when a user trips or slips. This dissertation presents TRIP-RTD (Trip Recovery in Prostheses via Reachability-based Trajectory Design), which extends the ARMTD framework to robotic prosthetic legs. TRIP-RTD uses predictions of a person’s response to a trip to plan recovery trajectories of a prosthetic leg. TRIP-RTD creates constraints for an online trajectory optimization which ensure the prosthetic foot is placed correctly across a range of plausible human responses. The approach is demonstrated in simulation using data of non-amputee subjects being tripped.PHDMechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169822/1/pdholmes_1.pd
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