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Quinlivan, Brendan

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Quinlivan

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Brendan

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Quinlivan, Brendan

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  • Publication

    Physical interface dynamics alter how robotic exosuits augment human movement: implications for optimizing wearable assistive devices

    (BioMed Central, 2017) Yandell, Matthew B.; Quinlivan, Brendan; Popov, Dmitry; Walsh, Conor; Zelik, Karl E.

    Background: Wearable assistive devices have demonstrated the potential to improve mobility outcomes for individuals with disabilities, and to augment healthy human performance; however, these benefits depend on how effectively power is transmitted from the device to the human user. Quantifying and understanding this power transmission is challenging due to complex human-device interface dynamics that occur as biological tissues and physical interface materials deform and displace under load, absorbing and returning power. Methods: Here we introduce a new methodology for quickly estimating interface power dynamics during movement tasks using common motion capture and force measurements, and then apply this method to quantify how a soft robotic ankle exosuit interacts with and transfers power to the human body during walking. We partition exosuit end-effector power (i.e., power output from the device) into power that augments ankle plantarflexion (termed augmentation power) vs. power that goes into deformation and motion of interface materials and underlying soft tissues (termed interface power). Results: We provide empirical evidence of how human-exosuit interfaces absorb and return energy, reshaping exosuit-to-human power flow and resulting in three key consequences: (i) During exosuit loading (as applied forces increased), about 55% of exosuit end-effector power was absorbed into the interfaces. (ii) However, during subsequent exosuit unloading (as applied forces decreased) most of the absorbed interface power was returned viscoelastically. Consequently, the majority (about 75%) of exosuit end-effector work over each stride contributed to augmenting ankle plantarflexion. (iii) Ankle augmentation power (and work) was delayed relative to exosuit end-effector power, due to these interface energy absorption and return dynamics. Conclusions: Our findings elucidate the complexities of human-exosuit interface dynamics during transmission of power from assistive devices to the human body, and provide insight into improving the design and control of wearable robots. We conclude that in order to optimize the performance of wearable assistive devices it is important, throughout design and evaluation phases, to account for human-device interface dynamics that affect power transmission and thus human augmentation benefits. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12984-017-0247-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

  • Publication

    Assistance magnitude versus metabolic cost reductions for a tethered multiarticular soft exosuit

    (American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2017) Quinlivan, Brendan; Lee, S.; Malcolm, Philippe; Rossi, D. M.; Grimmer, M.; Siviy, Christopher; Karavas, Nikolaos; Wagner, D.; Asbeck, A.; Galiana Bujanda, Ignacio; Walsh, Conor

    When defining requirements for any wearable robot for walking assistance it is paramount to maximize the user’s net metabolic benefit, while limiting the metabolic penalty of carrying the system’s mass. Thus, the aim of this study was to isolate and characterize the relationship between assistance magnitude and the metabolic cost of walking while also examining changes to the wearer’s underlying gait mechanics. The study was performed with a tethered multiarticular soft exosuit during normal walking where assistance was directly applied at the ankle joint and indirectly at the hip due to a textile architecture. The exosuit controller was designed such that the delivered torque profile at the ankle joint approximated that of the biological torque during normal walking. Seven subjects walked on a treadmill at 1.5 m s-1 in one unpowered and four powered conditions where the peak moment applied at the ankle joint was varied from approximately 10% to 38% of biological ankle moment (equivalent to an applied force of 18.7% to 75.0% of body weight). Results showed that with increasing peak exosuit ankle moment, net metabolic rate continually decreased within the tested range. When maximum assistance was applied, the metabolic rate of walking was reduced by 22.83 ± 3.17% relative to the powered-off condition (mean ± s.e.m.).