Identification of Hip and Knee Joint Impedance During the Swing Phase of Walking
Herman van der Kooij, Simone S.Fricke, Ronald C. van 't Veld, Ander, Vallinas Prieto, Arvid Q.L. Keemink, Alfred C. Schouten, and Edwin H.F. van, Asseldonk

TL;DR
This study developed a novel perturbation device to measure hip, knee, and ankle joint impedance during walking, providing valuable data for clinical and robotic applications, with reliable estimates for hip and knee but not ankle.
Contribution
A new lower limb perturbator (LOPER) was created to identify joint impedance during walking, enabling measurements of hip and knee impedance with high accuracy.
Findings
Hip and knee impedance can be reliably estimated during walking.
Ankle impedance estimation was unreliable due to inconsistent responses.
LOPER minimally affects natural walking patterns.
Abstract
Knowledge on joint impedance during walking in various conditions is relevant for clinical decision-making and the development of robotic gait trainers, leg prostheses, leg orthotics and wearable exoskeletons. Whereas ankle impedance during walking has been experimentally assessed, knee and hip joint impedance during walking have not been identified yet. Here we developed and evaluated a lower limb perturbator to identify hip, knee and ankle joint impedance during treadmill walking. The lower limb perturbator (LOPER) consists of an actuator connected to the thigh via rods. The LOPER allows to apply force perturbations to a free-hanging leg, while standing on the contralateral leg, with a bandwidth of up to 39 Hz. While walking in minimal impedance mode, the interaction forces between LOPER and the thigh were low (<5 N) and the effect on the walking pattern was smaller than the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
