An adaptive low-dimensional control to compensate for actuator redundancy and FES-induced muscle fatigue in a hybrid neuroprosthesis
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文摘
To restore walking and standing function in persons with paraplegia, a hybrid walking neuroprosthesis that combines a powered exoskeleton and functional electrical stimulation (FES) can be more advantageous than sole FES or powered exoskeleton technologies. However, the hybrid actuation structure introduces certain control challenges: actuator redundancy, cascaded muscle activation dynamics, FES-induced muscle fatigue, and unmeasurable states. In this paper, a human motor control inspired control scheme is combined with a dynamic surface control method to overcome these challenges. The new controller has an adaptive muscle synergy-based feedforward component which requires a fewer number of control signals to actuate multiple effectors in a hybrid neuroprosthesis. In addition, the feedforward component has an inverse fatigue signal to counteract the effects of the muscle fatigue. A dynamic surface control (DSC) method is used to deal with the cascaded actuation dynamics without the need for acceleration signals. The DSC structure was modified with a delay compensation term to deal with the electromechanical delays due to FES. A model based estimator is used to estimate the unmeasurable fatigue and actuator activation signals. The development of the controller and a Lyapunov stability analysis, which yielded semi-global uniformly ultimately boundedness, are presented in the paper. Computer simulations were performed to test the new controller on a 2 degrees of freedom fixed hip model after which preliminary experiments were conducted on one able-bodied male subject in the fixed hip configuration.
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