Collaborative Research: Legible Co-Adaptation of Wearable Devices for As-Needed Assistance of Arm Motion
合作研究:可穿戴设备的清晰协同适应,以按需协助手臂运动
基本信息
- 批准号:2110133
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 34.37万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Continuing Grant
- 财政年份:2021
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2021-10-01 至 2024-09-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
For people who have difficulties moving their arms or grasping objects, an exoskeleton can be used to augment a person’s capabilities and, in some cases, to provide rehabilitation. An arm exoskeleton can take the form of a brace worn from the hand to above the elbow, with motors to assist movement and to provide additional strength. Existing commercial exoskeleton systems have software with control parameters that can be adjusted to an individual’s capabilities, needs, and comfort, but these settings are not modified automatically while the device is being used. In some cases, a person could fatigue over the course of a long task, thus requiring the exoskeleton to help more at the end of a task than at the beginning. In other cases, a person might gain more ability as they are assisted in movements over days or weeks, allowing the exoskeleton to start providing less assistance. The motivating objective of this research is to enable co-adaptation of an arm-worn exoskeleton, where the control parameters of the exoskeleton adapt over time to the person’s changing capabilities, generating synergistic coordinated motion between the human-exoskeleton team. This project promotes the progress of science and advances the national health, prosperity and welfare through the development of an adaptive exoskeleton controller designed to provide as-needed motion assistance based on the user's changing level of muscular fatigue and capabilities. The research considers augmenting the abilities of healthy participants, which aligns with reducing musculoskeletal risk for an industrial or military application, as well as motion assistance for older populations, which can aid with sensorimotor deficits due to aging. The project addresses fatigue detection, legible notifications, and device assistance to enable synergistic physical and cognitive fit between the human and intelligent exoskeleton machine. This convergent research brings together theories from computer science, human factors, robotics, physical therapy, and kinesiology to advance a fundamental understanding of human-robot interactions. The project also includes public engagement through STEM activities for middle school girls, as well as through activities for life-long learning for older adults.The function of the co-adaptive algorithm can be expressed using principles motivated by dynamical systems theory. The algorithm will adapt the exoskeleton controller at the parameter dynamics level (a time scale describing parameters associated with completing the task) for a specified graph dynamics (a longer time scale describing the connectivity architecture representing the system). The algorithm encourages stability of the graph dynamics using a legibility scheme. The project team will use the commercially available Myomo MyoPro powered orthosis as a platform to evaluate co-adaptation of a human-exoskeleton team. The project team plans a control legibility scheme that will convey a series of notifications to the user to inform her/him about what the MyoPro is doing. The legibility scheme is designed to align with enabling a calibrated trust of the user with respect to the device and to prevent bifurcations in the graph dynamics. The specific objectives of the research are: (1) to incorporate measures of muscle fatigue in a legible co-adaptive exoskeleton controller; (2) to evaluate the hypothesis that a co-adaptive controller can improve human-exoskeleton task performance in the presence of fatigue in a healthy young adult population; and (3) to examine the generalizability of the co-adaptive controller to an older adult population. The primary task across all studies is a pick-and-place task where participants grasp an object (e.g., a book, pen, basket, cup) from a table and place it on a bookshelf, then return the object to the table. The use of different object sizes and weights increases the number of grasp types in the dataset, as well as the motor control strategies required, providing increased generalizability of the algorithms across grasping tasks. Participants will perform concurrent cognitive tasks that will be used to assess cognitive load during the primary pick-and-place task. To increase the rate of fatigue, the primary task is alternated with a fatiguing task. Results from these studies will advance the usability of exoskeleton systems by accounting for natural forms of human adaptation within the exoskeleton control policy, enabling exoskeletons to be applied for longer-duration applications that support aging in place and the mitigation of injury.This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
对于活动手臂或抓取物体有困难的人,外骨骼可以用来增强人的能力,在某些情况下,还可以提供康复。手臂外骨骼可以采取从手到肘部上方佩戴的支架的形式,带有马达来帮助运动并提供额外的力量。现有的商业外骨骼系统具有控制参数的软件,可以根据个人的能力、需求和舒适度进行调整,但在使用设备时,这些设置不会自动修改。在某些情况下,人在长时间的工作过程中可能会感到疲劳,因此需要外骨骼在任务结束时比开始时帮助更多。在其他情况下,一个人可能会获得更多的能力,因为他们在几天或几周的运动中得到帮助,使外骨骼开始提供较少的帮助。这项研究的激励目标是使手臂上佩戴的外骨骼能够共同适应,其中外骨骼的控制参数随着时间的推移而适应人的不断变化的能力,在人类-外骨骼团队之间产生协同协调的运动。该项目通过开发一种自适应外骨骼控制器来促进科学进步,促进国家健康、繁荣和福利,该控制器旨在根据用户不断变化的肌肉疲劳程度和能力提供所需的运动辅助。这项研究考虑增强健康参与者的能力,这与降低工业或军事应用中的肌肉骨骼风险相一致,以及为老年人提供运动辅助,这可以帮助弥补因衰老而导致的感觉运动障碍。该项目致力于疲劳检测、清晰的通知和设备辅助,以实现人类和智能外骨骼机器之间的协同身体和认知匹配。这项融合了计算机科学、人的因素、机器人学、理疗学和运动学的理论,以促进对人与机器人交互的基本理解。该项目还包括通过中学女生的STEM活动以及老年人的终身学习活动进行公共参与。协同适应算法的功能可以用动力系统理论激励的原理来表达。该算法将在参数动力学级别(描述与完成任务相关联的参数的时标)处调整外骨骼控制器以适应指定的图动态(描述代表系统的连通性体系结构的较长时标)。该算法使用易读性方案来鼓励图形动态的稳定性。该项目团队将使用市场上可获得的Myomo MyoPro动力矫形器作为平台,评估人类外骨骼团队的共同适应。项目团队计划一个控制易读性方案,该方案将向用户传达一系列通知,以告知他/她MyoPro正在做什么。易读性方案被设计成与实现用户对设备的校准信任相一致,并防止图形动态中的分叉。这项研究的具体目标是:(1)将肌肉疲劳的测量纳入易读的共适应外骨骼控制器;(2)评估共适应控制器可以在健康的年轻人群体中改善存在疲劳的人-外骨骼任务绩效的假设;以及(3)检验共适应控制器对老年人群的普适性。所有研究的主要任务是挑选位置,参与者从桌子上抓起一个物体(例如,书、笔、篮子、杯子),把它放在书架上,然后把物体放回桌子上。不同对象大小和权重的使用增加了数据集中抓取类型的数量,以及所需的运动控制策略,从而提高了抓取任务中算法的通用性。参与者将同时执行认知任务,这些任务将被用来在主要的挑选和放置任务中评估认知负荷。为了增加疲劳率,主要任务与疲劳任务交替进行。这些研究的结果将在外骨骼控制政策中考虑到人类适应的自然形式,从而提高外骨骼系统的可用性,使外骨骼能够应用于支持就地老化和减轻伤害的更长时间的应用。该奖项反映了NSF的法定使命,并通过使用基金会的智力优势和更广泛的影响审查标准进行评估,被认为值得支持。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
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会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Leia Stirling其他文献
Emergent Gait Strategies Defined by Cluster Analysis When Using Imperfect Exoskeleton Algorithms
使用不完美外骨骼算法时通过聚类分析定义的紧急步态策略
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2024 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:5.2
- 作者:
Man I Wu;Leia Stirling - 通讯作者:
Leia Stirling
Examination of the torque required to passively palmar abduct the thumb CMC joint in a pediatric population with hemiplegia and stroke
- DOI:
10.1016/j.jbiomech.2015.10.027 - 发表时间:
2015-12-16 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Leia Stirling;Mona Qureshi Ahmad;Damian Kelty-Stephen;Annette Correia - 通讯作者:
Annette Correia
The effect of a passive shoulder exoskeleton on a sensorimotor task when performed above and at shoulder height
- DOI:
10.1016/j.ergon.2024.103668 - 发表时间:
2024-11-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Jianyang Tang;Dongjoon Kong;Leia Stirling - 通讯作者:
Leia Stirling
Effects of Biofeedback on Muscle Effort Reduction when Holding Positions with a Powered Upper Limb Exoskeleton
使用动力上肢外骨骼保持姿势时生物反馈对减少肌肉用力的影响
- DOI:
10.1177/21695067231192634 - 发表时间:
2023 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Xiangyu Peng;Leia Stirling - 通讯作者:
Leia Stirling
Impact of Imperfect Exoskeleton Algorithms on Step Characteristics, Task Performance, and Perception of Exoskeleton Performance
不完美的外骨骼算法对步态特征、任务性能和外骨骼性能感知的影响
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2023 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Man I Wu;Leia Stirling - 通讯作者:
Leia Stirling
Leia Stirling的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Leia Stirling', 18)}}的其他基金
Improving Human-Exoskeleton Fluency Through an Investigation of Dynamic Control Parameters
通过研究动态控制参数提高人体外骨骼的流畅性
- 批准号:
1905524 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 34.37万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Improving Human-Exoskeleton Fluency Through an Investigation of Dynamic Control Parameters
通过研究动态控制参数提高人体外骨骼的流畅性
- 批准号:
1952279 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 34.37万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
CAREER: Advances in Monitoring Human Performance: Moving Wearable Technology from the Expert to Nonexpert User
职业:监测人类表现的进展:将可穿戴技术从专家转向非专家用户
- 批准号:
1453141 - 财政年份:2015
- 资助金额:
$ 34.37万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
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