Task-dependent impedance and implications for upper-limb prosthesis control

被引:20
|
作者
Blank, Amy A. [1 ]
Okamura, Allison M. [2 ]
Whitcomb, Louis L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Johns Hopkins Univ, 112 Hackerman Hall,3400 North Charles St, Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
来源
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
User-selectable impedance; prosthetic arms; variable impedance control; CYBERNETIC ELBOW PROSTHESES; CONTROL BALANCES STABILITY; FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT; ADAPTIVE-CONTROL; CONTROL-SYSTEMS; STIFFNESS; DYNAMICS; MANIPULATORS; MOVEMENTS; ROBOTS;
D O I
10.1177/0278364913517728
中图分类号
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号
080202 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Modern-day prosthetic limbs are currently unable to imitate the versatile interaction behaviors of real human arms. Although humans can vary the impedance of their arms, commercially available prosthetic limbs have impedance properties that cannot be directly controlled by users. We investigate the hypothesis that user-selectable prosthesis impedance properties could improve the user's ability to interact effectively with a variety of environments. We report the results of a series of human subject studies exploring this hypothesis using either a virtual prosthesis or a robot arm as a prosthesis proxy. We observed human performance with different stiffness and damping levels in the prosthesis proxy in two one-degree-of-freedom tasks: (1) a force minimization task and (2) a trajectory tracking task. The virtual prosthesis studies focus on human performance in an ideal simulated system to avoid limitations of a physical implementation, whereas the robot arm study focuses on performance changes that result from limitations of physical robotic hardware. The virtual prosthesis results showed that task-dependent impedance can improve user performance and that users can evaluate the effects of changing impedance. The robot arm results showed similar performance benefits of task-dependent impedance in a physical robotic system. These studies identified areas in which non-ideal characteristics of the physical system limited users' performance; most notably, the physical system could not achieve the low damping levels that helped subjects reduce contact forces in the virtual prosthesis studies. Thus, we identify some design considerations for prostheses with user-selectable impedance that can achieve useful impedance ranges for improving user performance.
引用
收藏
页码:827 / 846
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Neural Interfaces for Upper-Limb Prosthesis Control
    Judy, Jack W.
    IEEE PULSE, 2012, 3 (02) : 57 - 60
  • [2] TASK-DEPENDENT MODULATION OF SHORT-LATENCY AND LONG-LATENCY ELECTROMYOGRAPHIC RESPONSES IN UPPER-LIMB MUSCLES
    DIETZ, V
    DISCHER, M
    TRIPPEL, M
    ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1994, 93 (01): : 49 - 56
  • [3] A TRAINING PROSTHESIS FOR UPPER-LIMB AMPUTEES
    HARRISON, R
    BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1965, 2 (5465): : 801 - &
  • [4] Fuzzy Variable Impedance Control for Upper-limb Rehabilitation Robot
    Xu, Guozheng
    Song, Aiguo
    FIFTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FUZZY SYSTEMS AND KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY, VOL 3, PROCEEDINGS, 2008, : 216 - 220
  • [5] Implicit Upper-Limb Prosthesis Control from Compensatory Body Motions
    Feder, Maddalena
    Grioli, G.
    Catalano, M. G.
    Bicchi, A.
    EXPERIMENTAL ROBOTICS, ISER 2023, 2024, 30 : 535 - 544
  • [6] Identifying a Upper-Limb Phase-Dependent Variable under Perturbations for Powered Prosthesis Arm Control
    Haupmann, Matthew
    Huang, Mia
    Selly, George
    Bagesterio, Leia
    Quintero, David
    2023 45TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE & BIOLOGY SOCIETY, EMBC, 2023,
  • [7] A novel socket design for upper-limb prosthesis
    Sang, Yuanjun
    Li, Xiang
    Gan, Yun
    Su, Daniel
    Luo, Yun
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED ELECTROMAGNETICS AND MECHANICS, 2014, 45 (1-4) : 881 - 886
  • [8] Distributed impedance control of coordinated dissimilar upper-limb exoskeleton arms
    Tahamipour-Z, S. Mohammad
    Mattila, Jouni
    CONTROL ENGINEERING PRACTICE, 2024, 142
  • [9] Counteracting Electrode Shifts in Upper-Limb Prosthesis Control via Transfer Learning
    Prahm, Cosima
    Schulz, Alexander
    Paassen, Benjamin
    Schoisswohl, Johannes
    Kaniusas, Eugenijus
    Dorffner, Georg
    Hammer, Barbara
    Aszmann, Oskar
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL SYSTEMS AND REHABILITATION ENGINEERING, 2019, 27 (05) : 956 - 962
  • [10] Identifying the Role of Proprioception in Upper-Limb Prosthesis Control: Studies on Targeted Motion
    Blank, Amy
    Okamura, Allison M.
    Kuchenbecker, Katherine J.
    ACM TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED PERCEPTION, 2010, 7 (03)