ROMay 7, 2021

Reinforcement Learning and Control of a Lower Extremity Exoskeleton for Squat Assistance

arXiv:2105.03489v149 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses safety and reliability issues for mobility-impaired users in rehabilitation exoskeletons, representing an incremental improvement with a novel method for a known bottleneck.

The authors tackled the challenge of ensuring stability and robustness in controlling a lower extremity rehabilitation exoskeleton during squat assistance, proposing a reinforcement learning-based motion controller that incorporates center of pressure information and achieves well-balanced and robust squatting motions under strong perturbations and realistic human interaction forces in numerical experiments.

A significant challenge for the control of a robotic lower extremity rehabilitation exoskeleton is to ensure stability and robustness during programmed tasks or motions, which is crucial for the safety of the mobility-impaired user. Due to various levels of the user's disability, the human-exoskeleton interaction forces and external perturbations are unpredictable and could vary substantially and cause conventional motion controllers to behave unreliably or the robot to fall down. In this work, we propose a new, reinforcement learning-based, motion controller for a lower extremity rehabilitation exoskeleton, aiming to perform collaborative squatting exercises with efficiency, stability, and strong robustness. Unlike most existing rehabilitation exoskeletons, our exoskeleton has ankle actuation on both sagittal and front planes and is equipped with multiple foot force sensors to estimate center of pressure (CoP), an important indicator of system balance. This proposed motion controller takes advantage of the CoP information by incorporating it in the state input of the control policy network and adding it to the reward during the learning to maintain a well balanced system state during motions. In addition, we use dynamics randomization and adversary force perturbations including large human interaction forces during the training to further improve control robustness. To evaluate the effectiveness of the learning controller, we conduct numerical experiments with different settings to demonstrate its remarkable ability on controlling the exoskeleton to repetitively perform well balanced and robust squatting motions under strong perturbations and realistic human interaction forces.

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