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This paper introduces a new invariant extended Kalman filter design that produces real-time state estimates and rapid error convergence for the estimation of the human body movement even in the presence of sensor misalignment and initial state estimation errors. The filter fuses the data returned by an inertial measurement unit (IMU) attached to the body (e.g., pelvis or chest) and a virtual measurement of zero stance-foot velocity (i.e., leg odometry). The key novelty of the proposed filter lies in that its process model meets the group affine property while the filter explicitly addresses the IMU placement error by formulating its stochastic process model as Brownian motions and incorporating the error in the leg odometry. Although the measurement model is imperfect (i.e., it does not possess an invariant observation form) and thus its linearization relies on the state estimate, experimental results demonstrate fast convergence of the proposed filter (within 0.2 seconds) during squatting motions even under significant IMU placement inaccuracy and initial estimation errors.more » « less
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We propose in this paper Periodic Interaction Primitives - a probabilistic framework that can be used to learn compact models of periodic behavior. Our approach extends existing formulations of Interaction Primitives to periodic movement regimes, i.e., walking. We show that this model is particularly well-suited for learning data-driven, customized models of human walking, which can then be used for generating predictions over future states or for inferring latent, biomechanical variables. We also demonstrate how the same framework can be used to learn controllers for a robotic prosthesis using an imitation learning approach. Results in experiments with human participants indicate that Periodic Interaction Primitives efficiently generate predictions and ankle angle control signals for a robotic prosthetic ankle, with MAE of 2.21 degrees in 0.0008s per inference. Performance degrades gracefully in the presence of noise or sensor fall outs. Compared to alternatives, this algorithm functions 20 times faster and performed 4.5 times more accurately on test subjects.more » « less
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