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Edwin van Asseldonk

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14 records found

Conference paper (2018) - Amber Emmens, Edwin Van Asseldonk, Marcella Masciullo, Matteo Arquilla, Iolanda Pisotta, Nevio Luigi Tagliamonte, Federica Tamburella, Marco Molinari, Herman Van Der Kooij
In this study, our goal was to improve the standing balance of people with a spinal cord injury by using a wearable exoskeleton that has ankle and knee actuation in the sagittal plane. Three test-pilots that have an incomplete spinal cord injury wore the exoskeleton and tried to maintain standing balance without stepping while receiving anteroposterior pushes. Two balance controllers were tested: One providing assistance based on the subject's body sway and one based on the whole body momentum. For both controllers, the balance performances of the test-pilots wearing the exoskeleton were assessed based on the center of mass kinematics and compared to the condition in which the device did not provide any assistance. One of the test-pilots was not able to maintain balance without assistance, but could withstand small pushes when any of the balance controllers was implemented. For this test-pilot the recovery time and sway amplitude hardly varied with the type of balance controller that was used. For the other two test-pilots the recovery time and the sway amplitude were smallest using the body sway controller. In conclusion, the wearable exoskeleton with balance controller was able to improve the balance performance of the test-pilots by reducing the recovery time after a perturbation and by enabling one of the test-pilots to maintain balance, who could not maintain balance by himself. ...

Symbiotic man-machine interactions in wearable exoskeletons to enhance mobility for paraplegics

Conference paper (2018) - Herman van der Kooij, Edwin van Asseldonk, Matteo Arquilla, Marco Molinari, Amy Wu, Auke Ijspeert, Florin Florin Dzeladini, Freygardur Thorsteinsson, Arash Arami, Etienne Burdet, Hsien Yung Huang, Wouter Gregoor, Gijs van Oort, Cor Meijneke, Victor Sluiter, Amber Emmens, Heide Witteveen, Nevio Luigi Tagliamonte, Federica Tamburella, Iolanda Pisotta, Marcella Masciullo
The main goal of the Symbitron project was to develop a safe, bio-inspired, personalized wearable exoskeleton that enables SCI patients to walk without additional assistance, by complementing their remaining motor function. Here we give an overview of major achievements of the projects. ...
Journal article (2017) - Camila Shirota, Edwin van Asseldonk, Zlatko Matjacic, Heike Vallery, Pierre Barralon, Serena Maggioni, Jaap H. Buurke, Jan F. Veneman
Clinically useful and efficient assessment of balance during standing and walking is especially challenging in patients with neurological disorders. However, rehabilitation robots could facilitate assessment procedures and improve their clinical value. We present a short overview of balance assessment in clinical practice and in posturography. Based on this overview, we evaluate the potential use of robotic tools for such assessment. The novelty and assumed main benefits of using robots for assessment are their ability to assess ‘severely affected’ patients by providing assistance-as-needed, as well as to provide consistent perturbations during standing and walking while measuring the patient’s reactions. We provide a classification of robotic devices on three aspects relevant to their potential application for balance assessment: 1) how the device interacts with the body, 2) in what sense the device is mobile, and 3) on what surface the person stands or walks when using the device. As examples, nine types of robotic devices are described, classified and evaluated for their suitability for balance assessment. Two example cases of robotic assessments based on perturbations during walking are presented. We conclude that robotic devices are promising and can become useful and relevant tools for assessment of balance in patients with neurological disorders, both in research and in clinical use. Robotic assessment holds the promise to provide increasingly detailed assessment that allows to individually tailor rehabilitation training, which may eventually improve training effectiveness. ...

A preliminary study on spinal cord injury patients

Conference paper (2016) - Amy R. Wu, Florin Dzeladini, Tycho J.H. Brug, F. Tamburella, Nevio L. Tagliamonte, Edwin van Asseldonk, Herman van der Kooij, Auke J. Ijspeert