4.6 Article

An Upper-Limb Power-Assist Exoskeleton Using Proportional Myoelectric Control

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 6677-6694

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s140406677

Keywords

upper limb; power-assist exoskeleton; proportional myoelectric control; pneumatic muscles; motion intention

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61103100, 61303137, 51205059, 51305077]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [Y13F020143]
  3. Shandong Province Outstanding Young Scientist Award [BS2013ZZ014]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2014QNA5009, 2232013D3-31]

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We developed an upper-limb power-assist exoskeleton actuated by pneumatic muscles. The exoskeleton included two metal links: a nylon joint, four size-adjustable carbon fiber bracers, a potentiometer and two pneumatic muscles. The proportional myoelectric control method was proposed to control the exoskeleton according to the user's motion intention in real time. With the feature extraction procedure and the classification (back-propagation neural network), an electromyogram (EMG)-angle model was constructed to be used for pattern recognition. Six healthy subjects performed elbow flexion-extension movements under four experimental conditions: (1) holding a 1-kg load, wearing the exoskeleton, but with no actuation and for different periods (2-s, 4-s and 8-s periods); (2) holding a 1-kg load, without wearing the exoskeleton, for a fixed period; (3) holding a 1-kg load, wearing the exoskeleton, but with no actuation, for a fixed period; (4) holding a 1-kg load, wearing the exoskeleton under proportional myoelectric control, for a fixed period. The EMG signals of the biceps brachii, the brachioradialis, the triceps brachii and the anconeus and the angle of the elbow were collected. The control scheme's reliability and power-assist effectiveness were evaluated in the experiments. The results indicated that the exoskeleton could be controlled by the user's motion intention in real time and that it was useful for augmenting arm performance with neurological signal control, which could be applied to assist in elbow rehabilitation after neurological injury.

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