A robotic emulator for the systematic exploration of transtibial biarticular prosthesis designs

People with transtibial limb loss frequently experience suboptimal gait outcomes. This is partly attributable to the absence of the biarticular gastrocnemius muscle, which plays a unique role in walking. Although a recent surge of biarticular prostheses aims to restore gastrocnemius function, the br...

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Published inJournal of rehabilitation and assistive technologies engineering Vol. 11; p. 20556683241280733
Main Authors Anderson, Anthony J, Gauthier, Kira A, Varre, Mathew Sunil, Nickerson, Kimberly A, Muir, Brittney C, Aubin, Patrick M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England SAGE Publications 01.01.2024
Sage Publications Ltd
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Online AccessGet full text
ISSN2055-6683
2055-6683
DOI10.1177/20556683241280733

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Summary:People with transtibial limb loss frequently experience suboptimal gait outcomes. This is partly attributable to the absence of the biarticular gastrocnemius muscle, which plays a unique role in walking. Although a recent surge of biarticular prostheses aims to restore gastrocnemius function, the broad design space and lack of consensus on optimal hardware and control strategies present scientific and engineering challenges. This study introduces a robotic biarticular prosthesis emulator, comprising a uniarticular ankle-foot prosthesis and knee flexion exoskeleton, each actuated by a custom off-board system. Benchtop experiments were conducted to characterize the emulator’s mechatronic performance. Walking experiments with one transtibial amputee demonstrated the system’s capability to provide knee and ankle assistance. The −3 dB bandwidths for the knee exoskeleton’s torque and motor velocity controllers were measured at approximately 5 Hz and 100 Hz, respectively. A feedforward iterative learning controller reduced the root-mean-squared torque tracking error from 6.04 Nm to 0.99 Nm in hardware-in-the-loop experiments, an 84% improvement. User-preference-based tuning yielded a peak knee torque of approximately 20% of the estimated biological knee moment. This biarticular prosthesis emulator demonstrates significant potential as a versatile research platform that can offer valuable insights for the advancement of lower-limb assistive devices.
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ISSN:2055-6683
2055-6683
DOI:10.1177/20556683241280733