Robust, Coordinated and Proportional Myoelectric Control of Upper-Limb Prostheses
Doctoral thesis
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/260782Utgivelsesdato
2013Metadata
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Sammendrag
From a prosthesis user's viewpoint there is a wide range of challenges in prosthesis research, despite the recent progression in development and manufacturing of multifunction prostheses. A small part of these challenges has been solved during the work underlying this thesis.
The scope of this thesis is to review and assess the existing methods used for proportional control, develop and demonstrate methods for artifact cancellation to increase the control reliability, design and implement a viable strategy for coordinated proportional control of multiple joints, suggest an unambiguous terminology for prosthesis control systems, and contribute to the clinical assessment of the results.
The thesis is organized as a compendium of scientific papers.
Paper A contains a pilot study of how to attenuate force induced artifacts in surface electromyography by measuring the external forces.
Paper B contains a pilot study of the adverse effects of limb position on pattern recognition based myoelectric control, hereafter called the limb position effect. Papers C, D and E contain the continuation of this project. The limb position effect was resolved by using multiple limb positions in training of the control system, and further improvements were achieved by additional use of accelerometers as a measurement of the limb position (relative to gravity). It was demonstrated that these two solutions are efficient in normally limbed subjects. Inspired by this research, further studies on prosthesis users have been reported by others.
Paper F contains a comprehensive review of proportional myoelectric control of upper limb prostheses. The main findings was that the composition of the training data set and the choice of training method and optimization criterion are topics that need to be addressed in future research. This paper also contains a review of terminology in prosthesis control systems, and an unambiguous terminology has been suggested; a work that may improve communication, increase the understanding of the subject and stimulate to more structured research.
Paper G contains development and practical testing of simultaneous proportional control of two motor functions (wrist rotation and hand open/close). This required development of prosthesis guided training for proportional control, and design of a novel prosthesis socket (equivalent) for normally-limbed subjects.
This thesis has contributed towards the long-term goal of offering an intuitive and robust control system to the end users of upper limb prostheses.
Utgiver
NTNUSerie
Doktoravhandlinger ved NTNU, 1503-8181; 2013:98Beslektede innførsler
Viser innførsler beslektet ved tittel, forfatter og emneord.
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Embedded control system for cybernetic wrist prosthesis
Brattbakken, Inge (Master thesis, 2010)This master thesis treats the NTNU Rotary Wrist Device(NRWD). The wrist has been developed through several projects and assignments, all derived from Øyvind Stavdahls PhD thesis from 2002, which led to a document of ... -
System Training and Assessment in Simultaneous Proportional Myoelectric Prosthesis Control
Fougner, Anders Lyngvi; Stavdahl, Øyvind; Kyberd, Peter Joseph (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2014)Background Pattern recognition control of prosthetic hands take inputs from one or more myoelectric sensors and controls one or more degrees of freedom. However, most systems created allow only sequential control of one ... -
Practical Artifact Cancellation for Myoelectric Prosthesis Control
Sæther, Marthe (Master thesis, 2008)Prostheses are artificial body parts that can be used by amputees. Myoelectric prostheses are controlled by so-called surface electromyograms (sEMG) that are acquired on the skin surface of the residual limb. A well-known ...