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Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit

The growing field of soft wearable exosuits, is gradually gaining terrain and proposing new complementary solutions in assistive technology, with several advantages in terms of portability, kinematic transparency, ergonomics, and metabolic efficiency. Those are palatable benefits that can be exploit...

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Autores principales: Missiroli, Francesco, Lotti, Nicola, Xiloyannis, Michele, Sloot, Lizeth H., Riener, Robert, Masia, Lorenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7805765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33501357
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2020.595844
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author Missiroli, Francesco
Lotti, Nicola
Xiloyannis, Michele
Sloot, Lizeth H.
Riener, Robert
Masia, Lorenzo
author_facet Missiroli, Francesco
Lotti, Nicola
Xiloyannis, Michele
Sloot, Lizeth H.
Riener, Robert
Masia, Lorenzo
author_sort Missiroli, Francesco
collection PubMed
description The growing field of soft wearable exosuits, is gradually gaining terrain and proposing new complementary solutions in assistive technology, with several advantages in terms of portability, kinematic transparency, ergonomics, and metabolic efficiency. Those are palatable benefits that can be exploited in several applications, ranging from strength and resistance augmentation in industrial scenarios, to assistance or rehabilitation for people with motor impairments. To be effective, however, an exosuit needs to synergistically work with the human and matching specific requirements in terms of both movements kinematics and dynamics: an accurate and timely intention-detection strategy is the paramount aspect which assume a fundamental importance for acceptance and usability of such technology. We previously proposed to tackle this challenge by means of a model-based myoelectric controller, treating the exosuit as an external muscular layer in parallel to the human biomechanics and as such, controlled by the same efferent motor commands of biological muscles. However, previous studies that used classical control methods, demonstrated that the level of device's intervention and effectiveness of task completion are not linearly related: therefore, using a newly implemented EMG-driven controller, we isolated and characterized the relationship between assistance magnitude and muscular benefits, with the goal to find a range of assistance which could make the controller versatile for both dynamic and static tasks. Ten healthy participants performed the experiment resembling functional daily activities living in separate assistance conditions: without the device's active support and with different levels of intervention by the exosuit. Higher assistance levels resulted in larger reductions in the activity of the muscles augmented by the suit actuation and a good performance in motion accuracy, despite involving a decrease of the movement velocities, with respect to the no assistance condition. Moreover, increasing torque magnitude by the exosuit resulted in a significant reduction in the biological torque at the elbow joint and in a progressive effective delay in the onset of muscular fatigue. Thus, contrarily to classical force and proportional myoelectric schemes, the implementation of an opportunely tailored EMG-driven model based controller affords to naturally match user's intention detection and provide an assistance level working symbiotically with the human biomechanics.
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spelling pubmed-78057652021-01-25 Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit Missiroli, Francesco Lotti, Nicola Xiloyannis, Michele Sloot, Lizeth H. Riener, Robert Masia, Lorenzo Front Robot AI Robotics and AI The growing field of soft wearable exosuits, is gradually gaining terrain and proposing new complementary solutions in assistive technology, with several advantages in terms of portability, kinematic transparency, ergonomics, and metabolic efficiency. Those are palatable benefits that can be exploited in several applications, ranging from strength and resistance augmentation in industrial scenarios, to assistance or rehabilitation for people with motor impairments. To be effective, however, an exosuit needs to synergistically work with the human and matching specific requirements in terms of both movements kinematics and dynamics: an accurate and timely intention-detection strategy is the paramount aspect which assume a fundamental importance for acceptance and usability of such technology. We previously proposed to tackle this challenge by means of a model-based myoelectric controller, treating the exosuit as an external muscular layer in parallel to the human biomechanics and as such, controlled by the same efferent motor commands of biological muscles. However, previous studies that used classical control methods, demonstrated that the level of device's intervention and effectiveness of task completion are not linearly related: therefore, using a newly implemented EMG-driven controller, we isolated and characterized the relationship between assistance magnitude and muscular benefits, with the goal to find a range of assistance which could make the controller versatile for both dynamic and static tasks. Ten healthy participants performed the experiment resembling functional daily activities living in separate assistance conditions: without the device's active support and with different levels of intervention by the exosuit. Higher assistance levels resulted in larger reductions in the activity of the muscles augmented by the suit actuation and a good performance in motion accuracy, despite involving a decrease of the movement velocities, with respect to the no assistance condition. Moreover, increasing torque magnitude by the exosuit resulted in a significant reduction in the biological torque at the elbow joint and in a progressive effective delay in the onset of muscular fatigue. Thus, contrarily to classical force and proportional myoelectric schemes, the implementation of an opportunely tailored EMG-driven model based controller affords to naturally match user's intention detection and provide an assistance level working symbiotically with the human biomechanics. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7805765/ /pubmed/33501357 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2020.595844 Text en Copyright © 2020 Missiroli, Lotti, Xiloyannis, Sloot, Riener and Masia. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Robotics and AI
Missiroli, Francesco
Lotti, Nicola
Xiloyannis, Michele
Sloot, Lizeth H.
Riener, Robert
Masia, Lorenzo
Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit
title Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit
title_full Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit
title_fullStr Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit
title_full_unstemmed Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit
title_short Relationship Between Muscular Activity and Assistance Magnitude for a Myoelectric Model Based Controlled Exosuit
title_sort relationship between muscular activity and assistance magnitude for a myoelectric model based controlled exosuit
topic Robotics and AI
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7805765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33501357
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2020.595844
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