4.7 Article

Optimizing Exoskeleton Assistance for Faster Self-Selected Walking

出版社

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSRE.2021.3074154

关键词

Legged locomotion; Exoskeletons; Torque; Optimization; Particle measurements; Atmospheric measurements; Real-time systems; Exoskeleton gait assistance; human-in-the-loop optimization; walking speed

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [CMMI-1734449]
  2. National Institutes of Health [K99AG065524]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In this study, human-in-the-loop optimization was used to demonstrate that ankle exoskeleton assistance can lead to significant increases in self-selected walking speed. By optimizing torque for speed, participants walked 42% faster than in normal shoes, highlighting the potential benefits for individuals with reduced walking speed.
Self-selected walking speed is an important aspect of mobility. Exoskeletons can increase walking speed, but the mechanisms behind these changes and the upper limits on performance are unknown. Human-in-the-loop optimization is a technique for identifying exoskeleton characteristics that maximize the benefits of assistance, which has been critical to achieving large improvements in energy economy. In this study, we used human-in-the-loop optimization to test whether large improvements in self-selected walking speed are possible through ankle exoskeleton assistance. Healthy participants (N =10) were instructed to walk at a comfortable speed on a self-paced treadmill while wearing tethered ankle exoskeletons. An algorithm sequentially applied different patterns of exoskeleton torque and estimated the speed-optimal pattern, which was then evaluated in separate trials. With torque optimized for speed, participants walked 42% faster than in normal shoes (1.83 ms(-1) vs. 1.31 ms(-1); Tukey HSD, p = 4 x 10(-8)), with speed increases ranging from 6% to 91%. Participants walked faster with speed-optimized torque than with torque optimized for energy consumption (1.55 ms(-1)) or torque chosen to induce slow walking (1.18 ms(-1)). Gait characteristics with speed-optimized torque were highly variable across participants, and changes in metabolic cost of transport ranged from a 31% decrease to a 78% increase, with a decrease of 2% on average. These results demonstrate that ankle exoskeletons can facilitate large increases in self-selected walking speed, which could benefit older adults and others with reduced walking speed.

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