DocumentCode
11299
Title
Estimation of Human Ankle Impedance During the Stance Phase of Walking
Author
Rouse, Elliott J. ; Hargrove, Levi J. ; Perreault, Eric J. ; Kuiken, Todd A.
Author_Institution
Biomed. Eng. Dept., Northwestern Univ., Evanston, IL, USA
Volume
22
Issue
4
fYear
2014
fDate
Jul-14
Firstpage
870
Lastpage
878
Abstract
Human joint impedance is the dynamic relationship between the differential change in the position of a perturbed joint and the corresponding response torque; it is a fundamental property that governs how humans interact with their environments. It is critical to characterize ankle impedance during the stance phase of walking to elucidate how ankle impedance is regulated during locomotion, as well as provide the foundation for future development of natural, biomimetic powered prostheses and their control systems. In this study, ankle impedance was estimated using a model consisting of stiffness, damping and inertia. Ankle torque was well described by the model, accounting for 98 ±1.2% of the variance. When averaged across subjects, the stiffness component of impedance was found to increase linearly from 1.5 to 6.5 Nm/rad/kg between 20% and 70% of stance phase. The damping component was found to be statistically greater than zero only for the estimate at 70% of stance phase, with a value of 0.03 Nms/rad/kg. The slope of the ankle´s torque-angle curve-known as the quasi-stiffness-was not statistically different from the ankle stiffness values, and showed remarkable similarity. Finally, using the estimated impedance, the specifications for a biomimetic powered ankle prosthesis were introduced that would accurately emulate human ankle impedance during locomotion.
Keywords
bioelectric phenomena; biomimetics; bone; damping; elastic constants; electric impedance measurement; gait analysis; prosthetics; statistical analysis; ankle torque-angle curve; biomimetic powered ankle prosthesis; biomimetic powered prostheses; damping; fundamental property; human ankle impedance estimation; human joint impedance; locomotion; perturbed joint; stance phase; stiffness component; walking; Damping; Impedance; Joints; Legged locomotion; Timing; Torque; Biological system modeling; prosthetic limbs; quasi-stiffness; stiffness; system identification;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2014.2307256
Filename
6750034
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