Inverse Optimal Control of Muscle Force Sharing During Pathological Gait
Filip Be\v{c}anovi\'c, Vincent Bonnet, Kosta Jovanovi\'c, Samer Mohammed, Rapha\"el Dumas

TL;DR
This study uses inverse optimal control to identify muscle force sharing strategies in post-stroke gait, revealing subject-specific control patterns and highlighting the importance of muscle power minimization in paretic limbs.
Contribution
It introduces a novel inverse optimal control approach to determine the best objective functions for modeling pathological gait, emphasizing subject- and leg-specific differences.
Findings
Subject-specific models perform best on their respective limbs.
Muscle power minimization is key for paretic limb modeling.
Cross-subject generalization is limited, especially for paretic legs.
Abstract
Muscle force sharing is typically resolved by minimizing a specific objective function to approximate neural control strategies. An inverse optimal control approach was applied to identify the "best" objective function, among a positive linear combination of basis objective functions, associated with the gait of two post-stroke males, one high-functioning (subject S1) and one low-functioning (subject S2). It was found that the "best" objective function is subject- and leg-specific. No single function works universally well, yet the best options are usually differently weighted combinations of muscle activation- and power-minimization. Subject-specific inverse optimal control models performed best on their respective limbs (\textbf{RMSE 178/213 N, CC 0.71/0.61} for non-paretic and paretic legs of S1; \textbf{RMSE 205/165 N, CC 0.88/0.85} for respective legs of S2), but cross-subject…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle activation and electromyography studies · Motor Control and Adaptation · Balance, Gait, and Falls Prevention
