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Dive into the research topics where Ignacio Galiana is active.

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Featured researches published by Ignacio Galiana.


IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine | 2014

Stronger, Smarter, Softer: Next-Generation Wearable Robots

Alan T. Asbeck; Ignacio Galiana; Ye Ding; Conor J. Walsh

Exosuits show much promise as a method for augmenting the body with lightweight, portable, and compliant wearable systems. We envision that such systems can be further refined so that they can be sufficiently low profile to fit under a wearers existing clothing. Our focus is on creating an assistive device that provides a fraction of the nominal biological torques and does not provide external load transfer. In early work, we showed that the system can substantially maintain normal biomechanics and positively affect a wearers metabolic rate. Many basic fundamental research and development challenges remain in actuator development, textile innovation, soft sensor development, human-machine interface (control), biomechanics, and physiology, which provides fertile ground for academic research in many disciplines. While we have focused on gait assistance thus far, numerous other applications are possible, including rehabilitation, upper body support, and assistance for other motions. We look forward to a future where wearable robots provide benefits for people across many areas of our society.


Science Robotics | 2017

Assistance magnitude versus metabolic cost reductions for a tethered multiarticular soft exosuit

Brendan Quinlivan; Sangjun Lee; Philippe Malcolm; Denise Martineli Rossi; Martin Grimmer; Christopher Siviy; Nikolaos Karavas; Diana Wagner; Alan T. Asbeck; Ignacio Galiana; Conor J. Walsh

Evaluation of a soft exosuit designed to reduce metabolic requirements during walking. When defining requirements for any wearable robot for walking assistance, it is important to maximize the user’s metabolic benefit resulting from the exosuit assistance while limiting the metabolic penalty of carrying the system’s mass. Thus, the aim of this study was to isolate and characterize the relationship between assistance magnitude and the metabolic cost of walking while also examining changes to the wearer’s underlying gait mechanics. The study was performed with a tethered multiarticular soft exosuit during normal walking, where assistance was directly applied at the ankle joint and indirectly at the hip due to a textile architecture. The exosuit controller was designed such that the delivered torque profile at the ankle joint approximated that of the biological torque during normal walking. Seven participants walked on a treadmill at 1.5 meters per second under one unpowered and four powered conditions, where the peak moment applied at the ankle joint was varied from about 10 to 38% of biological ankle moment (equivalent to an applied force of 18.7 to 75.0% of body weight). Results showed that, with increasing exosuit assistance, net metabolic rate continually decreased within the tested range. When maximum assistance was applied, the metabolic rate of walking was reduced by 22.83 ± 3.17% relative to the powered-off condition (mean ± SEM).


IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering | 2017

Biomechanical and Physiological Evaluation of Multi-Joint Assistance With Soft Exosuits

Ye Ding; Ignacio Galiana; Alan T. Asbeck; Jaehyun Bae; Thiago R. T. Santos; Vanessa Lara Araújo; Sangjun Lee; Kenneth G. Holt; Conor J. Walsh

To understand the effects of soft exosuits on human loaded walking, we developed a reconfigurable multi-joint actuation platform that can provide synchronized forces to the ankle and hip joints. Two different assistive strategies were evaluated on eight subjects walking on a treadmill at a speed of 1.25 m/s with a 23.8 kg backpack: 1) hip extension assistance and 2) multi-joint assistance (hip extension, ankle plantarflexion and hip flexion). Results show that the exosuit introduces minimum changes to kinematics and reduces biological joint moments. A reduction trend in muscular activity was observed for both conditions. On average, the exosuit reduced the metabolic cost of walking by


international conference on robotics and automation | 2015

Multi-joint soft exosuit for gait assistance

Alan T. Asbeck; Kai Schmidt; Ignacio Galiana; Diana Wagner; Conor J. Walsh

{\hbox{0.21}} \pm {\hbox{0.04}}~


international conference on robotics and automation | 2014

Multi-joint actuation platform for lower extremity soft exosuits

Ye Ding; Ignacio Galiana; Alan T. Asbeck; Brendan Quinlivan; Conor J. Walsh

and


international conference on robotics and automation | 2016

Controlling negative and positive power at the ankle with a soft exosuit

Sangjun Lee; Simona Crea; Philippe Malcolm; Ignacio Galiana; Alan T. Asbeck; Conor J. Walsh

{\hbox{0.67}} \pm {\hbox{0.09}}~{\hbox{W/kg}}


international conference on robotics and automation | 2016

IMU-based iterative control for hip extension assistance with a soft exosuit

Ye Ding; Ignacio Galiana; Christopher Siviy; Fausto A. Panizzolo; Conor J. Walsh

for hip extension assistance and multi-joint assistance respectively, which is equivalent to an average metabolic reduction of 4.6% and 14.6%, demonstrating that soft exosuits can effectively improve human walking efficiency during load carriage without affecting natural walking gait. Moreover, it indicates that actuating multiple joints with soft exosuits provides a significant benefit to muscular activity and metabolic cost compared to actuating single joint.


Science Robotics | 2017

Reducing the metabolic cost of running with a tethered soft exosuit

Giuk Lee; Jinsoo Kim; Fausto A. Panizzolo; Y. M. Zhou; Lauren Baker; Ignacio Galiana; Philippe Malcolm; Conor J. Walsh

Exosuits represent a new approach for applying assistive forces to an individual, using soft textiles to interface to the wearer and transmit forces through specified load paths. In this paper we present a body-worn, multi-joint soft exosuit that assists both ankle plantar flexion and hip flexion through a multiarticular load path, and hip extension through a separate load path, at walking speeds up to 1.79m/s (4.0mph). The exosuit applies forces of 300N in the multiarticular load path and 150N in hip extension, which correspond to torques of 21% and 19% of the nominal biological moments at the ankle and hip during unloaded walking. The multi-joint soft exosuit uses a new actuation approach that exploits joint synergies, with one motor actuating the multiarticular load paths on both legs and one motor actuating the hip extension load paths on both legs, in order to reduce the total system weight. Control is accomplished by an algorithm that uses only a gyroscope at the heel and a load cell monitoring the suit tension, and is shown to adapt within a single step to changes in cadence. Additionally, the control algorithm can create slack in the suit during non-level-ground walking motions such as stepping over obstacles so that the system can be transparent to the wearer when required. The resulting system consumes 137W, and has a mass of 6.5kg including batteries.


Archive | 2017

Autonomous Soft Exosuit for Hip Extension Assistance

Nikos Karavas; Jinsoo Kim; Ignacio Galiana; Ye Ding; Adam Couture; Diana Wagner; Asa M. Eckert-Erdheim; Conor J. Walsh

Lower-limb wearable robots have been proposed as a means to augment or assist the wearers natural performance, in particular, in the military and medical field. Previous research studies on human-robot interaction and biomechanics have largely been performed with rigid exoskeletons that add significant inertia to the lower extremities and provide constraints to the wearers natural kinematics in both actuated and non-actuated degrees of freedom. Actuated lightweight soft exosuits minimize these effects and provide a unique opportunity to study human-robot interaction in wearable systems without affecting the subjects underlying natural dynamics. In this paper, we present the design and control of a reconfigurable multi-joint actuation platform that can provide biologically realistic torques to ankle, knee, and hip joints through lower extremity soft exosuits. Two different soft exosuits have been designed to deliver assistive forces through Bowden cable transmission to the ankle and hip joints. Through human subject experiments, it is demonstrated that with a real-time admittance controller, accurate force profile tracking can be achieved during walking. The average energy delivered to the test subject was calculated while walking at 1.25 m/s and actuated with 15% of the total torque required by the biological joints. The results show that the ankle joint received an average of 3.02J during plantar flexion and that the hip joint received 1.67J during flexion each gait cycle. The efficiency of the described suit and controller in transferring energy to the human biological joints is 70% for the ankle and 48% for the hip.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2017

Lower Limb Biomechanical Analysis During an Unanticipated Step on a Bump Reveals Specific Adaptations of Walking on Uneven Terrains

Fausto A. Panizzolo; Sangjun Lee; Taira Miyatake; Denise Martineli Rossi; Christopher Siviy; Jozefien Speeckaert; Ignacio Galiana; Conor J. Walsh

The soft exosuit is a new approach for applying assistive forces over the wearers body through load paths configured by the textile architecture. In this paper, we present a body-worn lower-extremity soft exosuit and a new control approach that can independently control the level of assistance that is provided during negative- and positive-power periods at the ankle. The exosuit was designed to create load paths assisting ankle plantarflexion and hip flexion, and the actuation system transmits forces from the motors to the suit via Bowden cables. A load cell and two gyro sensors per leg are used to measure real-time data, and the controller performs position control of the cable on a step-by-step basis with respect to the power delivered to the wearers ankle by controlling two force parameters, the pretension and the active force. Human subjects testing results demonstrate that the controller is capable of modulating the amount of power delivered to the ankle joint. Also, significant reductions in metabolic rate (11%-15%) were observed, which indicates the potential of the proposed control approach to provide benefit to the wearer during walking.

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Philippe Malcolm

University of Nebraska Omaha

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