Functional kinematic and kinetic requirements of the upper limb during activities of daily living: a recommendation on necessary joint capabilities for prosthetic arms
Christopher Herneth, Amartya Ganguly, and Sami Haddadin

TL;DR
This study provides detailed joint kinematic and kinetic data during daily activities to guide the design of more functional and user-friendly prosthetic arms, reducing power needs and improving performance.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive dataset of upper limb joint requirements during ADL and demonstrates data-driven optimization of prosthetic joint axes for improved efficiency.
Findings
Joint torques scale linearly with limb and object mass
Optimized wrist axes reduce peak power by 22-38%
High torque correlation exploited for design improvements
Abstract
Prosthetic limb abandonment remains an unsolved challenge as amputees consistently reject their devices. Current prosthetic designs often fail to balance human-like perfomance with acceptable device weight, highlighting the need for optimised designs tailored to modern tasks. This study aims to provide a comprehensive dataset of joint kinematics and kinetics essential for performing activities of daily living (ADL), thereby informing the design of more functional and user-friendly prosthetic devices. Functionally required Ranges of Motion (ROM), velocities, and torques for the Glenohumeral (rotation), elbow, Radioulnar, and wrist joints were computed using motion capture data from 12 subjects performing 24 ADLs. Our approach included the computation of joint torques for varying mass and inertia properties of the upper limb, while torques induced by the manipulation of experimental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle activation and electromyography studies
