Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development

Neuromuscular and sensorimotor degeneration caused by stroke or any other disease significantly reduce the physical, cognitive, and social well-being across the life span. Mostly, therapeutic interventions are employed in order to restore the lost degrees-of-freedom (DOF) caused by such impairments...

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Main Authors: Pablo Delgado, Sajja Alekhya, Amirhossein Majidirad, Nils A. Hakansson, Jaydip Desai, Yimesker Yihun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/18/6336
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spelling doaj-a3645fee98e74ad7a4c3434aa7dae8552020-11-25T03:47:23ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172020-09-01106336633610.3390/app10186336Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton DevelopmentPablo Delgado0Sajja Alekhya1Amirhossein Majidirad2Nils A. Hakansson3Jaydip Desai4Yimesker Yihun5Mechanical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260, USABiomedical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260, USAMechanical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260, USABiomedical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260, USABiomedical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260, USAMechanical Engineering, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260, USANeuromuscular and sensorimotor degeneration caused by stroke or any other disease significantly reduce the physical, cognitive, and social well-being across the life span. Mostly, therapeutic interventions are employed in order to restore the lost degrees-of-freedom (DOF) caused by such impairments and automating these therapeutic tasks through exoskeletons/robots is becoming a common practice. However, aligning these robotic devices with the complex anatomical and geometrical motions of the joints is very challenging. At the same time, a good alignment is required in order to establish a better synergy of human-exoskeleton system for an effective intervention procedure. In this paper, a case study of an exoskeleton and shoulder joint alignment were studied through different size and orientation impairment models through motion capture data and musculoskeletal modeling in OpenSim. A preliminary result indicates that shoulder elevation is very sensitive to misalignment and varies with shoulder joint axes orientation; this is partly due to drastic displacement of the upper arm axes with respect to the shoulder joint origin during elevation. Additional study and analysis is required to learn any possible restraint on shoulder elevation that could potentially help in the exoskeleton development.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/18/6336shoulder kinematicsrehabilitationjoint alignmentbiomechanicsmovement analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pablo Delgado
Sajja Alekhya
Amirhossein Majidirad
Nils A. Hakansson
Jaydip Desai
Yimesker Yihun
spellingShingle Pablo Delgado
Sajja Alekhya
Amirhossein Majidirad
Nils A. Hakansson
Jaydip Desai
Yimesker Yihun
Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development
Applied Sciences
shoulder kinematics
rehabilitation
joint alignment
biomechanics
movement analysis
author_facet Pablo Delgado
Sajja Alekhya
Amirhossein Majidirad
Nils A. Hakansson
Jaydip Desai
Yimesker Yihun
author_sort Pablo Delgado
title Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development
title_short Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development
title_full Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development
title_fullStr Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development
title_full_unstemmed Shoulder Kinematics Assessment towards Exoskeleton Development
title_sort shoulder kinematics assessment towards exoskeleton development
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Neuromuscular and sensorimotor degeneration caused by stroke or any other disease significantly reduce the physical, cognitive, and social well-being across the life span. Mostly, therapeutic interventions are employed in order to restore the lost degrees-of-freedom (DOF) caused by such impairments and automating these therapeutic tasks through exoskeletons/robots is becoming a common practice. However, aligning these robotic devices with the complex anatomical and geometrical motions of the joints is very challenging. At the same time, a good alignment is required in order to establish a better synergy of human-exoskeleton system for an effective intervention procedure. In this paper, a case study of an exoskeleton and shoulder joint alignment were studied through different size and orientation impairment models through motion capture data and musculoskeletal modeling in OpenSim. A preliminary result indicates that shoulder elevation is very sensitive to misalignment and varies with shoulder joint axes orientation; this is partly due to drastic displacement of the upper arm axes with respect to the shoulder joint origin during elevation. Additional study and analysis is required to learn any possible restraint on shoulder elevation that could potentially help in the exoskeleton development.
topic shoulder kinematics
rehabilitation
joint alignment
biomechanics
movement analysis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/18/6336
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AT nilsahakansson shoulderkinematicsassessmenttowardsexoskeletondevelopment
AT jaydipdesai shoulderkinematicsassessmenttowardsexoskeletondevelopment
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