4.5 Article

Assessment methodology for human-exoskeleton interactions: Kinetic analysis based on muscle activation

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROROBOTICS
Volume 16, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnbot.2022.982950

Keywords

assistance; emg-to-force processing; exoskeletons; human-robot interaction; kinematic; kinetic

Funding

  1. European Union
  2. [688175]

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This paper introduces a methodology for evaluating the kinetic effects of exoskeletons based on data collected via EMG and motion capture systems. The method calculates kinetic parameters, such as torque and power, reducing the complexity of experimental apparatus and data analysis. Furthermore, the method combines data from the literature and laboratory, allowing for easy access to statistical analysis.
During the development and assessment of an exoskeleton, many different analyzes need to be performed. The most frequently used evaluate the changes in muscle activations, metabolic consumption, kinematics, and kinetics. Since human-exoskeleton interactions are based on the exchange of forces and torques, the latter of these, kinetic analyzes, are essential and provide indispensable evaluation indices. Kinetic analyzes, however, require access to, and use of, complex experimental apparatus, involving many instruments and implicating lengthy data analysis processes. The proposed methodology in this paper, which is based on data collected via EMG and motion capture systems, considerably reduces this burden by calculating kinetic parameters, such as torque and power, without needing ground reaction force measurements. This considerably reduces the number of instruments used, allows the calculation of kinetic parameters even when the use of force sensors is problematic, does not need any dedicated software, and will be shown to have high statistical validity. The method, in fact, combines data found in the literature with those collected in the laboratory, allowing the analysis to be carried out over a much greater number of cycles than would normally be collected with force plates, thus enabling easy access to statistical analysis. This new approach evaluates the kinetic effects of the exoskeleton with respect to changes induced in the user's kinematics and muscular activation patterns and provides indices that quantify the assistance in terms of torque (AMI) and power (API). Following the User-Center Design approach, which requires driving the development process as feedback from the assessment process, this aspect is critical. Therefore, by enabling easy access to the assessment process, the development of exoskeletons could be positively affected.

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