4.5 Article

Cooperative ankle-exoskeleton control can reduce effort to recover balance after unexpected disturbances during walking

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12984-022-01000-y

Keywords

Balance; Control; Exoskeleton; Ankle; Human-robot interaction; Gait

Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council (NWO) [P16-05]

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This study proposes a cooperative ankle-exoskeleton control strategy and evaluates its effectiveness in able-bodied participants. The results demonstrate that the proposed controller reduces participants' effort while maintaining their ability to counteract balance disturbances. Significant reductions in muscle activity were observed, indicating the potential of this strategy in supporting and improving balance control in individuals with motor disabilities.
Background In the last two decades, lower-limb exoskeletons have been developed to assist human standing and locomotion. One of the ongoing challenges is the cooperation between the exoskeleton balance support and the wearer control. Here we present a cooperative ankle-exoskeleton control strategy to assist in balance recovery after unexpected disturbances during walking, which is inspired on human balance responses. Methods We evaluated the novel controller in ten able-bodied participants wearing the ankle modules of the Symbitron exoskeleton. During walking, participants received unexpected forward pushes with different timing and magnitude at the pelvis level, while being supported (Exo-Assistance) or not (Exo-NoAssistance) by the robotic assistance provided by the controller. The effectiveness of the assistive strategy was assessed in terms of (1) controller performance (Detection Delay, Joint Angles, and Exerted Ankle Torques), (2) analysis of effort (integral of normalized Muscle Activity after perturbation onset); and (3) Analysis of center of mass COM kinematics (relative maximum COM Motion, Recovery Time and Margin of Stability) and spatio-temporal parameters (Step Length and Swing Time). Results In general, the results show that when the controller was active, it was able to reduce participants' effort while keeping similar ability to counteract and withstand the balance disturbances. Significant reductions were found for soleus and gastrocnemius medialis activity of the stance leg when comparing Exo-Assistance and Exo-NoAssistance walking conditions. Conclusions The proposed controller was able to cooperate with the able-bodied participants in counteracting perturbations, contributing to the state-of-the-art of bio-inspired cooperative ankle exoskeleton controllers for supporting dynamic balance. In the future, this control strategy may be used in exoskeletons to support and improve balance control in users with motor disabilities.

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