4.6 Article

Virtual Stiffness: A Novel Biomechanical Approach to Estimate Limb Stiffness of a Multi-Muscle and Multi-Joint System

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23020673

Keywords

myoelectric control; impedance estimation; real-time control; null-space control; EMG-to-force mapping; musculoskeletal model; muscle redundancy; exoskeleton

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This study presents a biomechanical model-based approach to estimate limb stiffness of a multi-joint, multi-muscle system from muscle activations. By projecting the muscle activation vector onto the null space of the linear mapping, the proposed method approximates the generated stiffness. The model provides a good approximation that can be directly implemented in wearable myoelectric controlled devices without additional calibrations.
In recent years, different groups have developed algorithms to control the stiffness of a robotic device through the electromyographic activity collected from a human operator. However, the approaches proposed so far require an initial calibration, have a complex subject-specific muscle model, or consider the activity of only a few pairs of antagonist muscles. This study described and tested an approach based on a biomechanical model to estimate the limb stiffness of a multi-joint, multi-muscle system from muscle activations. The virtual stiffness method approximates the generated stiffness as the stiffness due to the component of the muscle-activation vector that does not generate any endpoint force. Such a component is calculated by projecting the vector of muscle activations, estimated from the electromyographic signals, onto the null space of the linear mapping of muscle activations onto the endpoint force. The proposed method was tested by using an upper-limb model made of two joints and six Hill-type muscles and data collected during an isometric force-generation task performed with the upper limb. The null-space projection of the muscle-activation vector approximated the major axis of the stiffness ellipse or ellipsoid. The model provides a good approximation of the voluntary stiffening performed by participants that could be directly implemented in wearable myoelectric controlled devices that estimate, in real-time, the endpoint forces, or endpoint movement, from the mapping between muscle activation and force, without any additional calibrations.

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