» Articles » PMID: 20071268

Control of a Powered Ankle-foot Prosthesis Based on a Neuromuscular Model

Overview
Publisher IEEE
Date 2010 Jan 15
PMID 20071268
Citations 84
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Control schemes for powered ankle-foot prostheses rely upon fixed torque-ankle state relationships obtained from measurements of intact humans walking at target speeds and across known terrains. Although effective at their intended gait speed and terrain, these controllers do not allow for adaptation to environmental disturbances such as speed transients and terrain variation. Here we present an adaptive muscle-reflex controller, based on simulation studies, that utilizes an ankle plantar flexor comprising a Hill-type muscle with a positive force feedback reflex. The model's parameters were fitted to match the human ankle's torque-angle profile as obtained from level-ground walking measurements of a weight and height-matched intact subject walking at 1 m/s. Using this single parameter set, clinical trials were conducted with a transtibial amputee walking on level ground, ramp ascent, and ramp descent conditions. During these trials, an adaptation of prosthetic ankle work was observed in response to ground slope variation, in a manner comparable to intact subjects, without the difficulties of explicit terrain sensing. Specifically, the energy provided by the prosthesis was directly correlated to the ground slope angle. This study highlights the importance of neuromuscular controllers for enhancing the adaptiveness of powered prosthetic devices across varied terrain surfaces.

Citing Articles

Novel neuromuscular controllers with simplified muscle model and enhanced reflex modulation: A comparative study in hip exoskeletons.

Manzoori A, Messara S, Di Russo A, Ijspeert A, Bouri M Wearable Technol. 2025; 5():e21.

PMID: 39811479 PMC: 11729522. DOI: 10.1017/wtc.2024.11.


Neuromechanical force-based control of a powered prosthetic foot.

Naseri A, Grimmer M, Seyfarth A, Ahmad Sharbafi M Wearable Technol. 2024; 1:e6.

PMID: 39050271 PMC: 11265316. DOI: 10.1017/wtc.2020.6.


Greater than recommended stiffness and power setting of a stance-phase powered leg prosthesis can improve step-to-step transition work and effective foot length ratio during walking in people with transtibial amputation.

Tacca J, Colvin Z, Grabowski A Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2024; 12:1336520.

PMID: 39011154 PMC: 11246994. DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2024.1336520.


Intuitive and versatile bionic legs: a perspective on volitional control.

Voss M, Koelewijn A, Beckerle P Front Neurorobot. 2024; 18:1410760.

PMID: 38974662 PMC: 11225306. DOI: 10.3389/fnbot.2024.1410760.


Continuous neural control of a bionic limb restores biomimetic gait after amputation.

Song H, Hsieh T, Yeon S, Shu T, Nawrot M, Landis C Nat Med. 2024; 30(7):2010-2019.

PMID: 38951635 PMC: 11271427. DOI: 10.1038/s41591-024-02994-9.