ROAIHCApr 20, 2025

K2MUSE: A human lower limb multimodal dataset under diverse conditions for facilitating rehabilitation robotics

arXiv:2504.14602v11 citationsh-index: 18
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This dataset addresses a data gap for researchers and developers in rehabilitation robotics and biomechanics, though it is incremental as it builds on existing data collection efforts.

The authors tackled the lack of comprehensive multimodal data for lower limb rehabilitation robotics by presenting the K2MUSE dataset, which includes kinematic, kinetic, ultrasound, and electromyography measurements from 30 participants under diverse conditions such as varying inclines, speeds, and nonideal acquisition scenarios.

The natural interaction and control performance of lower limb rehabilitation robots are closely linked to biomechanical information from various human locomotion activities. Multidimensional human motion data significantly deepen the understanding of the complex mechanisms governing neuromuscular alterations, thereby facilitating the development and application of rehabilitation robots in multifaceted real-world environments. However, currently available lower limb datasets are inadequate for supplying the essential multimodal data and large-scale gait samples necessary for effective data-driven approaches, and they neglect the significant effects of acquisition interference in real applications.To fill this gap, we present the K2MUSE dataset, which includes a comprehensive collection of multimodal data, comprising kinematic, kinetic, amplitude-mode ultrasound (AUS), and surface electromyography (sEMG) measurements. The proposed dataset includes lower limb multimodal data from 30 able-bodied participants walking under different inclines (0$^\circ$, $\pm$5$^\circ$, and $\pm$10$^\circ$), various speeds (0.5 m/s, 1.0 m/s, and 1.5 m/s), and different nonideal acquisition conditions (muscle fatigue, electrode shifts, and inter-day differences). The kinematic and ground reaction force data were collected via a Vicon motion capture system and an instrumented treadmill with embedded force plates, whereas the sEMG and AUS data were synchronously recorded for thirteen muscles on the bilateral lower limbs. This dataset offers a new resource for designing control frameworks for rehabilitation robots and conducting biomechanical analyses of lower limb locomotion. The dataset is available at https://k2muse.github.io/.

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