Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
9
The MIT Leg Lab: From Robots to Rehab
10
State Of The Art Flex-Foot Otto Bock C-Leg
11
State of the Art: Prosthetist defines knee damping Otto Bock C-Leg
12
The MIT Knee: A Step Towards Autonomy Virtual Prosthetist Virtual Biomechanist
13
How The MIT Knee Works: Mechanism
14
How The MIT Knee Works: Sensors Knee Position Axial Force Bending Moment Measured Local to Knee Axis (no ankle or foot sensors) Amputee can use vertical shock system
15
Goal: Early Stance Flexion & Extension How the MIT Knee Works: Stance Control
16
Stance Control: Three States Stance Flexion & Stance Extension – A variable hydraulic damper – Damping scales with axial load Late Stance – Minimize damping Toe-Loading to trigger late-stance zero damping is automatically adjusted by system
17
Stance Flexion
18
Goal: Control Peak Flexion Angle & Terminal Impact How the MIT Knee Works: Swing Control
19
Swing Control: Flexion
21
Swing Phase: Extension Extension damping adaptation Stage one: – Map t c versus impact force – Apply appropriate damping Stage two: – Control final angle while minimizing impact force Foot Contact Time
22
The MIT Knee In Action
23
Human Knees Brake and Thrust 0 1 Power (W/Kg) Percent Gait Cycle
24
Human Ankles are Smart Springs Variable stiffness foot-ankle systems Leg stiffness control in walking and running humans
25
Human Ankles are Powered
26
Future of O&P Leg Systems: Intelligent Application of Power Greater Distance & Less Fatigue Natural Gait - Dynamic Cosmesis Enhanced Stability Increased Mobility
27
Human Rehab: A Road Map to the Future Better Power Systems and Actuators
28
Series-Elastic Actuators (Muscle-Tendon)
29
Controlling Force, not Position Weight: 2.5 lbs. Stroke: 3 in. Max. Force: 300 lbs. Force Bandwidth: 30 Hz
30
Nearly autonomous Controllable Swam 0.5 body length per second Biomechatronics Group Hybrid Robots
31
Human Rehab: A Road Map to the Future Improved Walking Models
32
Low Stiffness Control: Virtual Model Control Language Passive walkers work using physical components Q: Can active walker algorithms be expressed using physical metaphors? A: Yes, and they perform surprisingly well
33
Virtual Assistive Devices for Legged Robots
34
Troody
35
Science Technology What are the biological models for human walking? Virtual Model Control Active O&P Leg Systems
36
Human Rehab: A Road Map to the Future Distributed Sensing and Intelligence
37
Virtual Prosthetist Virtual Biomechanist User Intent
38
Collaborators Leg Laboratory Gill Pratt Biomechatronics Group Robert Dennis (UM) Nadia Rosenthal (MGH) Richard Marsh (NE) Spaulding Gait Laboratory Casey Kerrigan Pat Riley
39
Sponsors Össur DARPA Schaeffer Foundation
40
Summary Advances in the science of legged locomotion, bioactuation, and sensing are necessary to step towards the next generation of O&P leg systems
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.