Extending the Law of Intersegmental Coordination: Implications for Powered Prosthetic Controls
Elad Siman Tov, Nili E. Krausz

TL;DR
This paper extends the Law of Intersegmental Coordination to include moments, analyzes 3D kinematic data for gait, and explores implications for powered prosthetic control, aiming to reduce amputee metabolic costs.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for 3D ISC analysis, broadens the law to moments, and provides a toolbox for studying gait coordination in amputees and able-bodied individuals.
Findings
Elevation angles are planar in amputee gait with powered and passive prostheses.
Moment-based coordination (ESM) differs between able-bodied and amputee gait.
The method can predict compensatory angles/moments to improve prosthetic control.
Abstract
Powered prostheses are capable of providing net positive work to amputees and have advanced in the past two decades. However, reducing amputee metabolic cost of walking remains an open problem. The Law of Intersegmental Coordination (ISC) has been observed across gaits and has been previously implicated in energy expenditure of walking, yet it has rarely been analyzed or applied within the context of lower-limb amputee gait. This law states that the elevation angles of the thigh, shank and foot over the gait cycle are not independent. In this work, we developed a method to analyze intersegmental coordination for lower-limb 3D kinematic data, to simplify ISC analysis. Moreover, inspired by motor control, biomechanics and robotics literature, we used our method to broaden ISC toward a new law of coordination of moments. We find these Elevation Space Moments (ESM), and present results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProsthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics · Muscle activation and electromyography studies · Motor Control and Adaptation
