Stillfried Georg, Stepper Johannes, Neppl Hannah, Vogel Jörn, Höppner Hannes
German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics, Wessling, Germany.
Statistisches Beratungslabor, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich, Germany.
Front Neurorobot. 2018 Mar 19;12:9. doi: 10.3389/fnbot.2018.00009. eCollection 2018.
Recently, progress has been made in the development of mechanical joints with variable intrinsic stiffness, opening up the search for application areas of such variable-stiffness joints. By varying the stiffness of its joints, the resonant frequency of a system can be tuned to perform cyclical tasks most energy-efficiently, making the variable-stiffness joint a candidate element for an advanced prosthetic device specifically designed for the cyclical task of drumming. A prerequisite for a successful variable-stiffness drumming prosthesis is the ability of human drummers to profitably employ different stiffness levels for playing different beats. In this pilot study, 29 able-bodied subjects (20 drumming novices and 9 experts) wear a cuff on the forearm, to which a drumstick is connected using changeable adapters, consisting of several leaf springs with different stiffness and one maximally stiff connection element. The subjects are asked to play simple regular drum beats at different frequencies, one of which is the resonant frequency of the adapter-drumstick system. The subject's performance of each drumming task is rated in terms of accuracy and precision, and the effort is measured using questionnaires for the perceived stress as well as electromyography (EMG) for the muscular activity. The experiments show that using springs instead of the stiff connection leads to lower muscular activity, indicating that humans are able to use the energy-storing capabilities of the springs, or that muscular activity is reduced due to the lower mass of the springs. However, the perceived stress is increased and the novices' performance lowered, possibly due to a higher cerebral load for controlling the elastic system. The hypothesis that "matching the resonant frequency of the spring-drumstick system to the desired frequency leads to better performance and lower effort" is not confirmed. Possible explanations are discussed. In conclusion, a series-elastic element appears to lower the muscular effort of drumming, while a stiff connection appears to minimize the mental load and has a positive effect on the performance of drumming novices.
最近,在具有可变固有刚度的机械关节开发方面取得了进展,从而开启了对此类可变刚度关节应用领域的探索。通过改变关节的刚度,可以调整系统的共振频率,以便最节能地执行周期性任务,这使得可变刚度关节成为专门为击鼓周期性任务设计的先进假肢装置的候选元件。成功的可变刚度击鼓假肢的一个先决条件是人类鼓手能够有效地利用不同的刚度水平来演奏不同的节拍。在这项初步研究中,29名身体健全的受试者(20名击鼓新手和9名专家)在前臂佩戴一个袖带,通过可更换的适配器将鼓槌连接到袖带上,适配器由几个不同刚度的板簧和一个最大刚度的连接元件组成。要求受试者以不同频率演奏简单的常规鼓点,其中一个频率是适配器 - 鼓槌系统的共振频率。根据准确性和精确性对受试者的每项击鼓任务表现进行评分,并使用感知压力问卷以及肌肉活动的肌电图(EMG)来测量努力程度。实验表明,使用弹簧代替刚性连接会导致肌肉活动降低,这表明人类能够利用弹簧的能量存储能力,或者由于弹簧质量较低而使肌肉活动减少。然而,感知到的压力增加,新手的表现下降,这可能是由于控制弹性系统的大脑负荷较高。“将弹簧 - 鼓槌系统的共振频率与期望频率匹配会带来更好的表现和更低的努力程度”这一假设未得到证实。讨论了可能的解释。总之,串联弹性元件似乎可以降低击鼓的肌肉努力,而刚性连接似乎可以最小化心理负荷,并对击鼓新手的表现产生积极影响。