A heart rate (HR) feedback control system for end-effector gait rehabilitation robots was previously developed and successfully tested, but oxygen uptake (VO2) is thought to better characterize physiological exercise intensity. The aim of the present study was to identify and compareVO2 and HR dynamics, and to develop and test a VO2 controller for an end-effector robot operated in stair climbing mode. Six able-bodied subjects were recruited for controller testing. Command response, disturbance rejection and robustness were assessed by means of three quantitative outcome measures: root-mean-square (RMS) error of VO2 (RMSE VO2), average control signal power (PΔP) and RMS error of volitionally controlled power (RMSEP). The nominal first-order linear model for VO2 had time constant τ = 52.4 s and steady-state gain k=0.0174 (l/min)/W. The mean time constant τ = 67.3 s for HR was significantly higher than for VO2, where τ = 53.4 (p=0.048). Command responses for a target VO2 profile gave consistent and accurate tracking with RMSEVO2 = 0.198 ± 0.070 l/min, PΔP = 2.15 ± 0.70W2 and RMSEP = 39.2 ± 15.4W(mean ± SD). Disturbance rejection performance was also found to be satisfactory. The results of the controller tests confirm the feasibility of the proposed VO2 feedback control strategy. Robustness was verified as the single LTI controller was specific to only one of the subjects and no difference in outcome values was apparent across all subjects. Subject-specific variability in breath-by-breath respiratory noise is the main challenge in feedback control of VO2.
CITATION STYLE
Riedo, J., & Hunt, K. J. (2017). Feedback control of oxygen uptake during robotics-assisted end-effector-based stair climbing. Systems Science and Control Engineering, 5(1), 142–155. https://doi.org/10.1080/21642583.2017.1297261
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