Transparency evaluation for the Kinematic Design of the Harnesses through Human-Exoskeleton Interaction Modeling
Riccardo Bezzini, Carlo Alberto Avizzano, Francesco Porcini,, Alessandro Filippeschi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simulation-based method to evaluate and compare exoskeleton designs by modeling human-robot interaction, focusing on minimizing interaction forces and ensuring natural user movement.
Contribution
It presents a novel flexible simulation approach that assesses exoskeleton configurations through interaction wrench minimization and trajectory similarity, validated with experimental data.
Findings
Simulation estimates align with experimental measurements
Method effectively compares different exoskeleton configurations
Contact wrench predictions are consistent with literature
Abstract
Lower Limb Exoskeletons (LLEs) are wearable robots that provide mechanical power to the user. Human-exoskeleton (HE) connections must preserve the user's natural behavior during the interaction, avoiding undesired forces. Therefore, numerous works focus on their minimization. Given the inherent complications of repeatedly prototyping and experimentally testing a device, modeling the exoskeleton and its physical interaction with the user emerges as a valuable approach for assessing the design effects. This paper proposes a novel method to compare different exoskeleton configurations with a flexible simulation tool. This approach contemplates simulating the dynamics of the device, including its interaction with the wearer, to evaluate multiple connection mechanism designs along with the kinematics and actuation of the LLE. This evaluation is based on the minimization of the interaction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
