The Design and Initial Experimental Validation of an Active Myoelectric Transfemoral Prosthesis

2012 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl D. Hoover ◽  
George D. Fulk ◽  
Kevin B. Fite

This paper describes a single degree-of-freedom active-knee transfemoral prosthesis to be used as a test bed for the development of architectures for myoelectric control. The development of an active-knee transfemoral prosthesis is motivated by the inability of passive commercial prostheses to provide the joint power required at the knee for many activities of daily living such as reciprocal stair ascent, which requires knee power outputs of up to 4 W/kg. Study of myoelectric control based on surface electromyogram (EMG) measurements of muscles in the residual limb is motivated by the desire to restore direct volitional control of the knee using a minimally-invasive neuromuscular control interface. The presented work describes the design of a transfemoral prosthesis prototype including the structure, actuation, instrumentation, electronics, and real-time control architecture. The performance characteristics of the prototype are discussed in the context of the requisite knee energetics for a variety of common locomotive functions. This paper additionally describes the development of a single-subject diagnostic socket with wall-embedded surface EMG electrodes and the implementation of a control architecture for myoelectric modulation of knee impedance. Experimental results of level walking for a single subject with unilateral transfemoral amputation demonstrate the potential for direct EMG-based control of locomotive function.

1995 ◽  
Vol 34 (05) ◽  
pp. 475-488
Author(s):  
B. Seroussi ◽  
J. F. Boisvieux ◽  
V. Morice

Abstract:The monitoring and treatment of patients in a care unit is a complex task in which even the most experienced clinicians can make errors. A hemato-oncology department in which patients undergo chemotherapy asked for a computerized system able to provide intelligent and continuous support in this task. One issue in building such a system is the definition of a control architecture able to manage, in real time, a treatment plan containing prescriptions and protocols in which temporal constraints are expressed in various ways, that is, which supervises the treatment, including controlling the timely execution of prescriptions and suggesting modifications to the plan according to the patient’s evolving condition. The system to solve these issues, called SEPIA, has to manage the dynamic, processes involved in patient care. Its role is to generate, in real time, commands for the patient’s care (execution of tests, administration of drugs) from a plan, and to monitor the patient’s state so that it may propose actions updating the plan. The necessity of an explicit time representation is shown. We propose using a linear time structure towards the past, with precise and absolute dates, open towards the future, and with imprecise and relative dates. Temporal relative scales are introduced to facilitate knowledge representation and access.


Author(s):  
John M. Hollerbach ◽  
Elaine Cohen ◽  
William Thompson ◽  
Rodney Freier ◽  
David Johnson ◽  
...  

Abstract A network-based real-time control architecture has been developed which integrates a haptic interface (the Sarcos Dextrous Arm Master) with an advanced CAD modeling system (Utah’s Alpha_1). New algorithms have been developed and tested for surface proximity testing, fast updates to local closest point on a surface, and smooth transitions between surfaces. The combination of these new algorithms with the haptic interface and CAD modeling system permits a user to actively touch and manipulate virtual parts as well as passively view them on a CRT screen.


2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 7660-7665
Author(s):  
A. Berna ◽  
P. Castillo ◽  
G. Sanahuja ◽  
F. González ◽  
P. García ◽  
...  

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