Redesign of Leg Assembly and Implementation of Reinforcement Learning for a Multi-Purpose Rehabilitation Robotic Device (RoboREHAB)
Patients who are suffering from neuromuscular disorders or injuries that impair motor control need to undergo rehabilitation to regain mobility. Gait training is commonly prescribed to patients to regain muscle memory. Automated-walking training devices were created to aid this process; while these...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied sciences 2024-01, Vol.14 (2), p.516 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Patients who are suffering from neuromuscular disorders or injuries that impair motor control need to undergo rehabilitation to regain mobility. Gait training is commonly prescribed to patients to regain muscle memory. Automated-walking training devices were created to aid this process; while these devices establish accurate ankle-path trajectories, the knee and hip movements are inaccurate. In this work, a redesign of the leg assembly in a multi-purpose rehabilitation robotic device (RoboREHAB) was explored to improve hip- and knee-movement accuracy by adding an extra link and rollers to the assembly. Motion analysis was employed to test feasibility, reinforcement learning was utilized to train the new leg assembly to walk, and the joint motions achieved with the redesign were compared to those achieved by motion-capture (mocap) data. As a key result, the motion analysis showed an improvement in the knee- and hip-path trajectories due to the added roller/joint segment. The redesigned leg assembly, under the reinforcement-learning policy, showed a 5% deviation from the motion-capture joint trajectories with a maximum deviation of 51.177 mm but maintained a similar profile to the mocap trajectory data. This is an improvement over the original two-segment design, which achieved a maximum deviation of 72.084 mm. These results in the knee- and hip-joint movements more closely reflect the mocap and motion-analysis results, validating the redesign and opening it up to further experimentation and technical improvement. |
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ISSN: | 2076-3417 2076-3417 |
DOI: | 10.3390/app14020516 |