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An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics

Stability of human gait is the ability to maintain upright posture during walking against external perturbations. It is a complex process determined by a number of cross-related factors, including gait trajectory, joint impedance and neural control strategies. Here, we consider a control strategy th...

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Autores principales: Fu, Chunjiang, Suzuki, Yasuyuki, Kiyono, Ken, Morasso, Pietro, Nomura, Taishin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4223921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25339687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2014.0958
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author Fu, Chunjiang
Suzuki, Yasuyuki
Kiyono, Ken
Morasso, Pietro
Nomura, Taishin
author_facet Fu, Chunjiang
Suzuki, Yasuyuki
Kiyono, Ken
Morasso, Pietro
Nomura, Taishin
author_sort Fu, Chunjiang
collection PubMed
description Stability of human gait is the ability to maintain upright posture during walking against external perturbations. It is a complex process determined by a number of cross-related factors, including gait trajectory, joint impedance and neural control strategies. Here, we consider a control strategy that can achieve stable steady-state periodic gait while maintaining joint flexibility with the lowest possible joint impedance. To this end, we carried out a simulation study of a heel-toe footed biped model with hip, knee and ankle joints and a heavy head-arms-trunk element, working in the sagittal plane. For simplicity, the model assumes a periodic desired joint angle trajectory and joint torques generated by a set of feed-forward and proportional-derivative feedback controllers, whereby the joint impedance is parametrized by the feedback gains. We could show that a desired steady-state gait accompanied by the desired joint angle trajectory can be established as a stable limit cycle (LC) for the feedback controller with an appropriate set of large feedback gains. Moreover, as the feedback gains are decreased for lowering the joint stiffness, stability of the LC is lost only in a few dimensions, while leaving the remaining large number of dimensions quite stable: this means that the LC becomes saddle-type, with a low-dimensional unstable manifold and a high-dimensional stable manifold. Remarkably, the unstable manifold remains of low dimensionality even when the feedback gains are decreased far below the instability point. We then developed an intermittent neural feedback controller that is activated only for short periods of time at an optimal phase of each gait stride. We characterized the robustness of this design by showing that it can better stabilize the unstable LC with small feedback gains, leading to a flexible gait, and in particular we demonstrated that such an intermittent controller performs better if it drives the state point to the stable manifold, rather than directly to the LC. The proposed intermittent control strategy might have a high affinity for the inverted pendulum analogy of biped gait, providing a dynamic view of how the step-to-step transition from one pendular stance to the next can be achieved stably in a robust manner by a well-timed neural intervention that exploits the stable modes embedded in the unstable dynamics.
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spelling pubmed-42239212014-12-06 An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics Fu, Chunjiang Suzuki, Yasuyuki Kiyono, Ken Morasso, Pietro Nomura, Taishin J R Soc Interface Research Articles Stability of human gait is the ability to maintain upright posture during walking against external perturbations. It is a complex process determined by a number of cross-related factors, including gait trajectory, joint impedance and neural control strategies. Here, we consider a control strategy that can achieve stable steady-state periodic gait while maintaining joint flexibility with the lowest possible joint impedance. To this end, we carried out a simulation study of a heel-toe footed biped model with hip, knee and ankle joints and a heavy head-arms-trunk element, working in the sagittal plane. For simplicity, the model assumes a periodic desired joint angle trajectory and joint torques generated by a set of feed-forward and proportional-derivative feedback controllers, whereby the joint impedance is parametrized by the feedback gains. We could show that a desired steady-state gait accompanied by the desired joint angle trajectory can be established as a stable limit cycle (LC) for the feedback controller with an appropriate set of large feedback gains. Moreover, as the feedback gains are decreased for lowering the joint stiffness, stability of the LC is lost only in a few dimensions, while leaving the remaining large number of dimensions quite stable: this means that the LC becomes saddle-type, with a low-dimensional unstable manifold and a high-dimensional stable manifold. Remarkably, the unstable manifold remains of low dimensionality even when the feedback gains are decreased far below the instability point. We then developed an intermittent neural feedback controller that is activated only for short periods of time at an optimal phase of each gait stride. We characterized the robustness of this design by showing that it can better stabilize the unstable LC with small feedback gains, leading to a flexible gait, and in particular we demonstrated that such an intermittent controller performs better if it drives the state point to the stable manifold, rather than directly to the LC. The proposed intermittent control strategy might have a high affinity for the inverted pendulum analogy of biped gait, providing a dynamic view of how the step-to-step transition from one pendular stance to the next can be achieved stably in a robust manner by a well-timed neural intervention that exploits the stable modes embedded in the unstable dynamics. The Royal Society 2014-12-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4223921/ /pubmed/25339687 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2014.0958 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ © 2014 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Fu, Chunjiang
Suzuki, Yasuyuki
Kiyono, Ken
Morasso, Pietro
Nomura, Taishin
An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
title An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
title_full An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
title_fullStr An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
title_full_unstemmed An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
title_short An intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
title_sort intermittent control model of flexible human gait using a stable manifold of saddle-type unstable limit cycle dynamics
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4223921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25339687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2014.0958
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