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contributor authorYul Shin, Sung
contributor authorDeshpande, Ashish D.
contributor authorSulzer, James
date accessioned2019-02-28T11:04:40Z
date available2019-02-28T11:04:40Z
date copyright5/31/2018 12:00:00 AM
date issued2018
identifier issn1942-4302
identifier otherjmr_010_04_044503.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4252427
description abstractThe cost of therapy is one of the most significant barriers to recovery after neurological injury. Robotic gait trainers move the legs through repetitive, natural motions imitating gait. Recent meta-analyses conclude that such training improves walking function in neurologically impaired individuals. While robotic gait trainers promise to reduce the physical burden on therapists and allow greater patient throughput, they are prohibitively costly. Our novel approach is to design a new single degree-of-freedom (DoF) robotic trainer that maintains the key advantages of the expensive trainers but with a simplified design to reduce cost. Our primary design challenge is translating the motion of a single actuator to an array of natural gait trajectories. We address this with an eight-link Jansen mechanism that matches a generalized gait trajectory. We then optimize the mechanism to match different trajectories through link length adjustment based on nine different gait patterns obtained from gait database of 113 healthy individuals. To physically validate the range in gait patterns produced by the simulation, we tested kinematic accuracy on a motorized wooden proof-of-concept of the gait trainer. The simulation and experimental results suggested that an adjustment of two links can reasonably fit a wide range of gait patterns under typical within-subject variance. We conclude that this design could provide the basis for a low-cost, patient-based electromechanical gait trainer for neurorecovery.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleDesign of a Single Degree-of-Freedom, Adaptable Electromechanical Gait Trainer for People With Neurological Injury
typeJournal Paper
journal volume10
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Mechanisms and Robotics
identifier doi10.1115/1.4039973
journal fristpage44503
journal lastpage044503-7
treeJournal of Mechanisms and Robotics:;2018:;volume( 010 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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