Muscle-Effort-Minimization-Inspired Kinematic Redundancy Resolution for Replicating Natural Posture of Human Arm

Replicating natural postures of human arms is essential to generate human-like behaviors in robotic applications for humans nearby. However, how to realize this requirement in interactive scenarios remains a challenge due to the kinematic redundancy and unknown postural control strategy of human arm...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on neural systems and rehabilitation engineering Vol. 30; pp. 2341 - 2351
Main Authors Li, Quanlin, Xia, Yang, Wang, Xianzong, Xin, Peiyang, Chen, Wenbin, Xiong, Caihua
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York IEEE 2022
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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Summary:Replicating natural postures of human arms is essential to generate human-like behaviors in robotic applications for humans nearby. However, how to realize this requirement in interactive scenarios remains a challenge due to the kinematic redundancy and unknown postural control strategy of human arms. Inspired by the physiological characteristics that the musculoskeletal system is coordinated to minimize muscle effort in human behaviors, this paper aims to address the issue by solving a muscle effort minimization problem. It adopts a high-fidelity human arm musculoskeletal model (HAMM) and considers the implicit constraint (desired hand pose) and the inequality constraints (range of joint motion). The constrained minimization is in general nonconvex, consequently sensitive to initial guesses in iterative procedures. So, it is impracticable to solve it directly with existing gradient-based deterministic approaches or standard evolutionary algorithms. As the main contribution, a hybrid inverse kinematics algorithm was proposed for the HAMM with 7 independent and 13 mimic joints to obtain the feasible arm postures satisfying the minimization constraints. Using the arm swivel angle that parametrizes the kinematic redundancy of the HAMM, geometrically equidistant initial guess candidates can be generated over the 1-dimension feasible posture manifold. As another contribution, we present a two-phase global minimization algorithm to handle the nonconvexity of the constrained minimization. It consists of a local-search phase on the null-space of the geometric Jacobian matrix and a global-search phase with an initial guess resampling strategy. The proposed approach was validated by replicating the natural arm postures of 5 right-handed subjects in daily tasks.
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ISSN:1534-4320
1558-0210
1558-0210
DOI:10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3198400