Equilibrium-point control of human elbow-joint movement under isometric environment by using multichannel functional electrical stimulation

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Abstract

Functional electrical stimulation (FES) is considered an effective technique for aiding quadriplegic persons. However, the human musculoskeletal system has highly non-linearity and redundancy. It is thus difficult to stably and accurately control limbs using FES. In this paper, we propose a simple FES method that is consistent with the motion-control mechanism observed in humans. We focus on joint motion by a pair of agonist-antagonist muscles of the musculoskeletal system, and define the "electrical agonist-antagonist muscle ratio (EAA ratio)" and "electrical agonist-antagonist muscle activity (EAA activity)" in light of the agonist-antagonist muscle ratio and agonist-antagonist muscle activity, respectively, to extract the equilibrium point and joint stiffness from electromyography (EMG) signals. These notions, the agonist-antagonist muscle ratio and agonist-antagonist muscle activity, are based on the hypothesis that the equilibrium point and stiffness of the agonist-antagonist motion system are controlled by the central nervous system. We derived the transfer function between the input EAA ratio and force output of the end-point. We performed some experiments in an isometric environment using six subjects. This transfer-function model is expressed as a cascade-coupled dead time element and a second-order system. High-speed, high-precision, smooth control of the hand force were achieved through the agonist-antagonist muscle stimulation pattern determined by this transfer function model. © 2014 Matsui, Hishii, Maegaki, Yamashita, Uemura, Hirai and Miyazaki.

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Matsui, K., Hishii, Y., Maegaki, K., Yamashita, Y., Uemura, M., Hirai, H., & Miyazaki, F. (2014). Equilibrium-point control of human elbow-joint movement under isometric environment by using multichannel functional electrical stimulation. Frontiers in Neuroscience, (8 JUN). https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2014.00164

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