. Scientific Frontline: Making Robotic Assistive Walking More Natural

Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Making Robotic Assistive Walking More Natural

 


A team of graduate students in Caltech's Advanced Mechanical Bipedal Experimental Robotics Lab (AMBER), led by Professor Aaron Ames, Bren Professor of Mechanical and Civil Engineering and Control and Dynamical Systems, is developing a new method of generating gaits for robotic assistive devices, which aims to guarantee stability and achieve more natural locomotion for different users.

A paper published in IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters outlines the AMBER team's method and represents the first instance of combining hybrid zero dynamics (HZD)—a mathematical framework for generating stable locomotion—with a musculoskeletal model to control a robotic assistive device for walking. The musculoskeletal model is a computational tool to noninvasively measure the relationship between muscle force and joint contact force. HZD is currently used to create stable walking gaits for bipedal robots, and the muscle model represents how much a muscle stretches or contracts with a given joint configuration.

The team demonstrates its approach on a battery-operated, motorized prosthetic leg. The battery powers the motors, which turn the joints. The motor movement is dictated by the mathematical algorithm developed by the researchers.

To create this mathematical algorithm, the AMBER research team recorded the muscle activity of a person walking with a prosthesis that followed the desired motion generated with HZD alone. This was done using electromyography (EMG), in which one electrode is placed on the skin above a specific muscle. Then the team analyzed the EMG activity of a person walking with a prosthesis that followed the desired motion generated by HZD combined with the muscle models. The latter more closely resembles how a human walks without a prosthesis.

"The muscle activity pattern of a human walking without the prosthetic is what we want to get closer to," says Rachel Gehlhar (MS '18), a graduate student in mechanical and civil engineering. Directly embedding musculoskeletal models into the optimization problem—the algorithm ultimately producing gaits for the prosthesis—provides a foundation for generating gaits that can feel more natural.

"If you're designing a trajectory for a robotic assistive device, a satisfactory gait should not only be stable but also feel natural," says Amy Li, a graduate student in computation and neural systems. A trajectory represents how the researchers want the prosthetic device to move over time.

"One method of controlling a robot is to describe the desired motions of each of the joints," adds Maegan Tucker (MS '19), a graduate student in mechanical and civil engineering. The robot in this case is the leg prosthesis. The knee and ankle joints follow their own respective trajectories in response to the command sent to the motor. "Our prosthetic device has two actuated joints: the knee and ankle. So, the desired motions and velocity of those joints over time is what we tell the robot to do."

One surprising discovery was that the combination of HZD and the muscle models generated desired walking gaits faster than had been expected. Forcing the robotic model to follow the patterns of muscle–tendon relationships adds further constraints to the gait-generation optimization problem, so one might expect the problem to be more difficult to solve. But with these additional constraints, a stable walking gait developed after fewer iterations of the optimization problem.

"Our assumption is that the combined model is helping guide the optimization problem toward solutions, which lead to natural walking," Tucker says. "In other words, the additional constraints help guide the optimization problem toward stable and more natural gaits faster."

This work helps bridge the gap between methods that use algorithms to produce desired walking motion and the field of biomechanics, which usually do not overlap. The resulting collaboration brings the AMBER lab a step closer to translating natural motion to a robotic assistive device like a prosthesis, with potential applications in full body exoskeleton devices for people with paraplegia.

Source/Credit: California Institute of Technology

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