DocumentCode
716855
Title
Tandem stance avoidance using adaptive and asymmetric admittance control for fall prevention
Author
Nakagawa, Shotaro ; Pei Di ; Hasegawa, Yasuhisa ; Fukuda, Toshio ; Kondo, Izumi ; Tanimoto, Masanori ; Jian Huang
Author_Institution
Dept. of Micro-Nano Syst. Eng., Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan
fYear
2015
fDate
26-30 May 2015
Firstpage
5898
Lastpage
5903
Abstract
Fall prevention is one of the most important functions of walking assistance devices for user´s safety. It is preferable that these devices obviates factors which induce falling over rather than helping them recovering from falling motion. Tandem stance, where both legs form a line along walking direction, is a factor of falling. It is often observed in turning motion because a swing leg moves in lateral direction as well as forward. Generally, upper body´s turning of a person proceeds before lower limb´s turning during walking, and the behavior of the lower limb is constrained by upper body turning. It is thus possible to control behavior of the lower limb for tandem stance prevention by constraining behavior of the upper body. This paper therefore introduces a tandem stance prevention method for safer walk of the elderly or physically challenged person. The method adjusts admittance of cane robot´s turning motion according to the positions of a support leg and a swing leg. The cane robot measures user´s leg position and estimates a walk phase of the user. By adjusting an admittance model of the cane robot based on the walk phase, the cane robot resists to turn while support leg is on the same side of the turning direction. As a result, the tandem stance is avoided. Through experiments, we confirmed that the cane robot successfully controls user´s upper body´s behavior to prevent the user from being in tandem stance.
Keywords
adaptive control; handicapped aids; legged locomotion; motion control; position control; adaptive admittance control; asymmetric admittance control; cane robot; fall prevention; falling motion; lateral direction; leg position; lower limb; robot turning motion; support leg; swing leg; tandem stance avoidance; user safety; walking assistance devices; walking direction; Admittance; Force; Legged locomotion; Robot sensing systems; Senior citizens; Turning;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2015.7140025
Filename
7140025
Link To Document