Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA.
J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2024 Jan 2;21(1):1. doi: 10.1186/s12984-023-01287-5.
Walking speed and energy economy tend to decline with age. Lower-limb exoskeletons have demonstrated potential to improve either measure, but primarily in studies conducted on healthy younger adults. Promising techniques like optimization of exoskeleton assistance have yet to be tested with older populations, while speed and energy consumption have yet to be simultaneously optimized for any population.
We investigated the effectiveness of human-in-the-loop optimization of ankle exoskeletons with older adults. Ten healthy adults > 65 years of age (5 females; mean age: 72 ± 3 yrs) participated in approximately 240 min of training and optimization with tethered ankle exoskeletons on a self-paced treadmill. Multi-objective human-in-the-loop optimization was used to identify assistive ankle plantarflexion torque patterns that simultaneously improved self-selected walking speed and metabolic rate. The effects of optimized exoskeleton assistance were evaluated in separate trials.
Optimized exoskeleton assistance improved walking performance for older adults. Both objectives were simultaneously improved; self-selected walking speed increased by 8% (0.10 m/s; p = 0.001) and metabolic rate decreased by 19% (p = 0.007), resulting in a 25% decrease in energetic cost of transport (p = 8e-4) compared to walking with exoskeletons applying zero torque. Compared to younger participants in studies optimizing a single objective, our participants required lower exoskeleton torques, experienced smaller improvements in energy use, and required more time for motor adaptation.
Our results confirm that exoskeleton assistance can improve walking performance for older adults and show that multiple objectives can be simultaneously addressed through human-in-the-loop optimization.
随着年龄的增长,步行速度和能量经济性往往会下降。下肢外骨骼已被证明有改善这两个指标的潜力,但主要是在对健康年轻成年人进行的研究中。有前途的技术,如外骨骼辅助的优化,尚未在老年人群中进行测试,而速度和能量消耗尚未针对任何人群进行同时优化。
我们研究了老年人的人机闭环优化对踝关节外骨骼的有效性。10 名健康的老年人(>65 岁;5 名女性;平均年龄:72±3 岁)在带有固定踝部外骨骼的跑步机上进行了大约 240 分钟的训练和优化。多目标人机闭环优化用于识别辅助踝关节跖屈转矩模式,这些模式可以同时提高自我选择的步行速度和代谢率。在单独的试验中评估了优化外骨骼辅助的效果。
优化后的外骨骼辅助改善了老年人的步行表现。两个目标同时得到了改善;自我选择的步行速度提高了 8%(0.10m/s;p=0.001),代谢率降低了 19%(p=0.007),与外骨骼施加零转矩相比,运输的能量成本降低了 25%(p=8e-4)。与优化单一目标的年轻参与者相比,我们的参与者需要较低的外骨骼转矩,能量消耗的改善较小,并且需要更多的时间来适应运动。
我们的结果证实,外骨骼辅助可以改善老年人的步行表现,并表明可以通过人机闭环优化同时解决多个目标。