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Powered Knee and Ankle Prosthesis with Adaptive Control Enables Climbing Stairs with Different Stair Heights, Cadences, and Gait Patterns

Authors :
Lukas Gabert
Sarah Hood
Tommaso Lenzi
Source :
IEEE Trans Robot
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2021.

Abstract

Powered prostheses can enable individuals with above-knee amputations to ascend stairs step-over-step. To accomplish this task, available stair ascent controllers impose a pre-defined joint impedance behavior or follow a pre-programmed position trajectory. These control approaches have proved successful in the laboratory. However, they are not robust to changes in stair height or cadence, which is essential for real-world ambulation. Here we present an adaptive stair ascent controller that enables individuals with above-knee amputations to climb stairs of varying stair heights at their preferred cadence and with their preferred gait pattern. We found that modulating the prosthesis knee and ankle position as a function of the user’s thigh in swing provides toe clearance for varying stair heights. In stance, modulating the torque-angle relationship as a function of the prosthesis knee position at foot contact provides sufficient torque assistance for climbing stairs of different heights. Furthermore, the proposed controller enables individuals to climb stairs at their preferred cadence and gait pattern, such as step-by-step, step-over-step, and two-step, similar to able-bodied individuals. We anticipate the proposed control strategy will improve the robustness of powered prostheses to environmental and human variance without the need for expert tuning, machine learning, or direct subject intervention, which may enable powered prostheses to more easily move from the lab to the real-world.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
IEEE Trans Robot
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18fe4320c63dc761931059e4375364dd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.36227/techrxiv.13177109.v3