IEEE Access (Jan 2019)

Intelligent Prediction of Human Lower Extremity Joint Moment: An Artificial Neural Network Approach

  • Baoping Xiong,
  • Nianyin Zeng,
  • Han Li,
  • Yuan Yang,
  • Yurong Li,
  • Meilan Huang,
  • Wuxiang Shi,
  • Min Du,
  • Yudong Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2900591
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 29973 – 29980

Abstract

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Human joint moment plays an important role in quantitative rehabilitation assessment and exoskeleton robot control. However, the existing moment prediction methods require kinematic and kinetic data of human body as input, and the measurement of them needs special equipment, which makes them unable to be used in an unconstrained environment. According to the situation, this paper develops a novel method where a small number of input variables selected by Elastic Net are used as the input of artificial neural network (ANN) to predict joint moments, which makes the prediction in daily life possible. The method is tested on the experimental data collected from eight healthy subjects that are running on a treadmill at a speed of 2, 3, 4, and 5 m/s, respectively. Taking the right lower limb's 10 electromyography (EMG) and 5 joints angle data as candidate variable sets, Elastic Net is used to obtain the variable coefficients of the right lower limb's four joint moments. The inputs of the ANN determined by the variable coefficients are used to train and predict the joint moments. Prediction accuracy is evaluated by using the normalized root-meansquare error (NRMSE %) and cross correlation coefficient (p) between the predicted joint moment and multibody dynamics moment. Results of our study suggest that the method can accurately predict joint moment (NRMSE <; 7.89%, p > 0.9633) with only 5-6 EMG signals. In conclusion, this method can effectively reduce the input variables while keeping a certain precision, which makes the joint moment prediction simple and out of equipment limitation. This method may facilitate the researches on real-time gait analysis and exoskeleton robot control in motor rehabilitation.

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