Enhancing Force Control of Prosthetic Controller for Hand Prosthesis by Mimicking Biological Properties

IF 3.7 3区 医学 Q2 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL
Qi Luo;Minglei Bai;Shuhan Chen;Kai Gao;Lairong Yin;Ronghua Du
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Prosthetic hands are frequently rejected due to frustrations in daily uses. By adopting principles of human neuromuscular control, it could potentially achieve human-like compliance in hand functions, thereby improving functionality in prosthetic hand. Previous studies have confirmed the feasibility of real-time emulation of neuromuscular reflex for prosthetic control. This study further to explore the effect of feedforward electromyograph (EMG) decoding and proprioception on the biomimetic controller. The biomimetic controller included a feedforward Bayesian model for decoding alpha motor commands from stump EMG, a muscle model, and a closed-loop component with a model of muscle spindle modified with spiking afferents. Real-time control was enabled by neuromorphic hardware to accelerate evaluation of biologically inspired models. This allows us to investigate which aspects in the controller could benefit from biological properties for improvements on force control performance. 3 non-disabled and 3 amputee subjects were recruited to conduct a “press-without-break” task, subjects were required to press a transducer till the pressure stabilized in an expected range without breaking the virtual object. We tested whether introducing more complex but biomimetic models could enhance the task performance. Data showed that when replacing proportional feedback with the neuromorphic spindle, success rates of amputees increased by 12.2% and failures due to breakage decreased by 26.3%. More prominently, success rates increased by 55.5% and failures decreased by 79.3% when replacing a linear model of EMG with the Bayesian model in the feedforward EMG processing. Results suggest that mimicking biological properties in feedback and feedforward control may improve the manipulation of objects by amputees using prosthetic hands. Clinical and Translational Impact Statement: This control approach may eventually assist amputees to perform fine force control when using prosthetic hands, thereby improving the motor performance of amputees. It highlights the promising potential of the biomimetic controller integrating biological properties implemented on neuromorphic models as a viable approach for clinical application in prosthetic hands.
仿生仿生手控制器的力控制
由于在日常使用中遇到挫折,假手经常被拒绝使用。通过采用人类神经肌肉控制的原理,它有可能在手部功能上实现类似人类的顺应性,从而改善假手的功能。先前的研究已经证实了神经肌肉反射实时仿真用于假肢控制的可行性。本研究进一步探讨前馈肌电解码和本体感觉对仿生控制器的影响。该仿生控制器包括一个前馈贝叶斯模型,用于解码残肢肌电图中的α运动命令,一个肌肉模型,以及一个闭环组件,其中肌肉主轴模型被尖峰传入事件修改。通过神经形态硬件实现实时控制,以加速生物启发模型的评估。这使我们能够研究控制器的哪些方面可以从生物特性中受益,以改善力控制性能。招募3名非残疾人和3名截肢者进行“按压-不折断”任务,受试者被要求按压传感器直到压力稳定在预期范围内而不折断虚拟物体。我们测试了引入更复杂但更仿生的模型是否能提高任务性能。数据显示,当用神经形态纺锤体代替比例反馈时,截肢者的成功率提高了12.2%,因断裂而失败的成功率降低了26.3%。更显著的是,在前驱肌电信号处理中,用贝叶斯模型代替线性肌电信号模型,成功率提高了55.5%,失败率降低了79.3%。结果表明,在反馈和前馈控制中模仿生物特性可能会改善截肢者使用假手对物体的操纵。临床和转化影响声明:这种控制方法可能最终帮助截肢者在使用假手时进行精细的力控制,从而改善截肢者的运动表现。它强调了将生物特性集成在神经形态模型上的仿生控制器作为一种可行的方法应用于假肢的临床应用的潜力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
2.90%
发文量
65
审稿时长
27 weeks
期刊介绍: The IEEE Journal of Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine is an open access product that bridges the engineering and clinical worlds, focusing on detailed descriptions of advanced technical solutions to a clinical need along with clinical results and healthcare relevance. The journal provides a platform for state-of-the-art technology directions in the interdisciplinary field of biomedical engineering, embracing engineering, life sciences and medicine. A unique aspect of the journal is its ability to foster a collaboration between physicians and engineers for presenting broad and compelling real world technological and engineering solutions that can be implemented in the interest of improving quality of patient care and treatment outcomes, thereby reducing costs and improving efficiency. The journal provides an active forum for clinical research and relevant state-of the-art technology for members of all the IEEE societies that have an interest in biomedical engineering as well as reaching out directly to physicians and the medical community through the American Medical Association (AMA) and other clinical societies. The scope of the journal includes, but is not limited, to topics on: Medical devices, healthcare delivery systems, global healthcare initiatives, and ICT based services; Technological relevance to healthcare cost reduction; Technology affecting healthcare management, decision-making, and policy; Advanced technical work that is applied to solving specific clinical needs.
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