DocumentCode
3188447
Title
A quasi-passive model of human leg function in level-ground walking
Author
Endo, Ken ; Paluska, Daniel ; Herr, Hugh
Author_Institution
Media Lab, Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA
fYear
2006
fDate
9-15 Oct. 2006
Firstpage
4935
Lastpage
4939
Abstract
In this paper, we seek to understand how leg muscles and tendons work mechanically during walking in order to motivate the design of efficient robotic legs. We hypothesize that a robotic leg comprising only knee and ankle passive and quasi-passive elements, including springs, clutches and variable-damping components, can capture the dominant mechanical behavior of the human knee and ankle during level-ground walking at self-selected speeds. As a preliminary evaluation of this hypothesis, we put forth a simple leg model that captures the gross features of the human leg musculoskeletal architecture. We vary model parameters, or spring constants, damping levels and times when clutches are engaged, using an optimization scheme where errors between model joint behaviours and biological joint mechanics are minimized. For model evaluation, kinetic and kinematic gait data are employed from a single participant walking across a level-ground surface at a self-selected gait speed (1.3 m/sec). With only a single hip actuator, we find good agreement between model predictions and experimental gait data, suggesting that knee and ankle actuators are not necessary for level-ground robotic ambulation at self-selected gait speeds. This result is in support of the idea that muscles that span the human knee and ankle mainly operate eccentrically or isometrically, affording the relatively high metabolic walking economy of humans
Keywords
damping; legged locomotion; robot kinematics; variable structure systems; 1.3 m/s; biological joint mechanics; human leg function; leg muscles; leg tendons; level-ground walking; quasi-passive model; robotic legs; self-selected gait; variable-damping components; Actuators; Biological system modeling; Humans; Knee; Leg; Legged locomotion; Muscles; Musculoskeletal system; Springs; Tendons; biomechanics; biomimetics; quasi-passive; robotic leg design;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligent Robots and Systems, 2006 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Conference_Location
Beijing
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0258-1
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0259-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IROS.2006.282454
Filename
4059202
Link To Document