4.8 Article

Adaptive Patient-Cooperative Control of a Compliant Ankle Rehabilitation Robot (CARR) With Enhanced Training Safety

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS
Volume 65, Issue 2, Pages 1398-1407

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TIE.2017.2733425

Keywords

Adaptive; patient-cooperative; admittance controller; ankle rehabilitation; robot; safety

Funding

  1. University of Auckland

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This paper proposes a new adaptive patient-cooperative control strategy for improving the effectiveness and safety of robot-assisted ankle rehabilitation. This control strategy has been developed and implemented on a compliant ankle rehabilitation robot (CARR). The CARR is actuated by four Festo Fluidic muscles located to the calf in parallel, has three rotational degrees of freedom. The control scheme consists of a position controller implemented in joint space and a high-level admittance controller in task space. The admittance controller adaptively modifies the predefined trajectory based on real-time ankle measurement, which enhances the training safety of the robot. Experiments were carried out using different modes to validate the proposed control strategy on the CARR. Three training modes include: 1) a passive mode using a joint-space position controller, 2) a patient-robot cooperative mode using a fixed-parameter admittance controller, and 3) a cooperative mode using a variable-parameter admittance controller. Results demonstrate satisfactory trajectory tracking accuracy, even when externally disturbed, with a maximum normalized root mean square deviation less than 5.4%. These experimental findings suggest the potential of this new patient-cooperative control strategy as a safe and engaging control solution for rehabilitation robots.

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