Home /Research /Case Study on Human Walking during Wearing a Powered Prosthetic Device: Effectiveness of the System “Human-Robot”
HRI

Case Study on Human Walking during Wearing a Powered Prosthetic Device: Effectiveness of the System “Human-Robot”

Svetlana Grosu, Pierre Cherelle, Chris Verheul, Bram Vanderborght, Dirk Lefeber

Year
2014
Citations
11

Abstract

It is known that force exchanges between a robotic assistive device and the end-user have a direct impact on the quality and performance of a particular movement task. This knowledge finds a special reflective importance in prosthetic industry due to the close human-robot collaboration. Although lower-extremity prostheses are currently better able to provide assistance as their upper-extremity counterparts, specific locomotion problems still remain. In a framework of this contribution the authors introduce the multibody dynamic modelling approach of the transtibial prosthesis wearing on a human body model. The obtained results are based on multibody dynamic simulations against the real experimental data using AMP-Foot 2.0, an energy efficient powered transtibial prosthesis for actively assisted walking of amputees.

Keywords

Multibody systemComputer scienceRobotTask (project management)SimulationPhysical medicine and rehabilitationProsthesisHuman–computer interactionEngineeringArtificial intelligence

Related papers

Browse all HRI papers