IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering (Jan 2023)

A Self-Aligning Upper-Limb Exoskeleton Preserving Natural Shoulder Movements: Kinematic Compatibility Analysis

  • Jun Pan,
  • Davide Astarita,
  • Andrea Baldoni,
  • Filippo Dell'Agnello,
  • Simona Crea,
  • Nicola Vitiello,
  • Emilio Trigili

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2023.3341219
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31
pp. 4954 – 4964

Abstract

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NESM- $\gamma $ is an upper-limb exoskeleton to train motor functions of post-stroke patients. Based on the kinesiology of the upper limb, the NESM- $\gamma $ includes a four degrees-of-freedom (DOF) active kinematic chain for the shoulder and elbow, along with a passive chain for self-aligning robotic joint axes with the glenohumeral (GH) joint’s center of rotation. The passive chain accounts for scapulohumeral rhythm and trunk rotations. To assess self-aligning performance, we analyzed the kinematic and electromyographic data of the shoulder in eight healthy subjects performing reaching tasks under three experimental conditions: moving without the exoskeleton (baseline), moving while wearing the exoskeleton with the passive DOFs properly functioning, i.e., unlocked (human-in-the-loop(HIL)-unlocked), and with the passive DOFs locked (HIL-locked). Comparison of baseline and HIL-unlocked conditions showed nearly unchanged anatomical movement patterns, with a root-mean-square error of shoulder angle lower than 5 deg and median deviations of the GH center of rotation below 20 mm. Peak muscle activations showed no significant differences. In contrast, the HIL-locked condition deviated significantly from the baseline, as observed by the trunk and GH trajectory deviations up to 50 mm, accompanied by increased peak muscle activations in the Deltoid and Upper Trapezius muscles. These findings highlight the need for kinematic solutions in shoulder exoskeletons that can accommodate the movements of the entire shoulder complex and trunk to achieve kinematic compatibility.

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