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Environmental Context Prediction for Lower Limb Prostheses With Uncertainty Quantification

Boxuan Zhong, Rafael Luiz da Silva, Minhan Li, He Huang, Edgar Lobatón

Year
2020
Citations
66

Abstract

Reliable environmental context prediction is critical for wearable robots (e.g., prostheses and exoskeletons) to assist terrain-adaptive locomotion. This article proposed a novel vision-based context prediction framework for lower limb prostheses to simultaneously predict human's environmental context for multiple forecast windows. By leveraging the Bayesian neural networks (BNNs), our framework can quantify the uncertainty caused by different factors (e.g., observation noise, and insufficient or biased training) and produce a calibrated predicted probability for online decision-making. We compared two wearable camera locations (a pair of glasses and a lower limb device), independently and conjointly. We utilized the calibrated predicted probability for online decision-making and fusion. We demonstrated how to interpret deep neural networks with uncertainty measures and how to improve the algorithms based on the uncertainty analysis. The inference time of our framework on a portable embedded system was less than 80 ms/frame. The results in this study may lead to novel context recognition strategies in reliable decision-making, efficient sensor fusion, and improved intelligent system design in various applications.

Keywords

Context (archaeology)Computer scienceWearable computerMachine learningSensor fusionArtificial intelligenceRobotArtificial neural networkInferenceEmbedded system

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