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  1. Robot assisted gait retraining is an increasingly common method for supporting restoration of walking function after neurological injury. Gait speed, an indicator of walking function, is correlated with propulsive force, a measure modulated by the posture of the trailing limb at push-off. With the ultimate goal of improving efficacy of robot assisted gait retraining, we sought to directly target gait propulsion, by exposing subjects to pulses of joint torque applied at the hip and knee joints to modulate push-off posture. In this work, we utilized a robotic exoskeleton to apply pulses of torque to the hip and knee joints, during individual strides, of 16 healthy control subjects, and quantified the effects of this intervention on hip extension and propulsive impulse during and after application of these pulses. We observed significant effects in the outcome measures primarily at the stride of pulse application and generally no after effects in the following strides. Specifically, when pulses were applied at late stance, we observed a significant increase in propulsive impulse when knee and/or hip flexion pulses were applied and a significant increase in hip extension angle when hip extension torque pulses were applied. When pulses were applied at early stance, we observed a significant increase in propulsive impulse associated with hip extension torque. 
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  2. Many stroke survivors suffer from hemiparesis, a condition that results in impaired walking ability. Walking ability is commonly assessed by walking speed, which is dependent on propulsive force generation both in healthy and stroke populations. Propulsive force generation is determined by two factors: ankle moment and the posture of the trailing limb during push-off. Recent work has used robotic assistance strategies to modulate propulsive force with some success. However, robotic strategies are limited by their high cost and the technical difficulty of fitting and operating robotic devices in a clinical setting. Here we present a new paradigm for goal-oriented gait training that utilizes a split belt treadmill to train both components of propulsive force generation, achieved by accelerating the treadmill belt of the trailing limb during push off. Belt accelerations require subjects to produce greater propulsive force to maintain their position on the treadmill and increase trailing limb angle through increased velocity of the accelerated limb. We hypothesized that locomotor adaptation to belt accelerations would result in measurable after effects in the form of increased propulsive force generation. We tested our protocol on healthy subjects at two acceleration magnitudes. Our results show that 79% of subjects significantly increased propulsive force generation following training, and that larger accelerations translated to larger, more persistent behavioral gains. 
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  3. Robot-assisted gait training is becoming increasingly common to support recovery of walking function after neurological injury. How to formulate controllers capable of promoting desired features in gait, i.e. goals, is complicated by the limited understanding of the human response to robotic input. A possible method to formulate controllers for goal-oriented gait training is based on the analysis of the joint torques applied by healthy subjects to modulate such goals. The objective of this work is to understand how sagittal plane joint torque is affected by two important gait parameters: gait speed (GS) and stride length (SL). We here present the results obtained from healthy subjects walking on a treadmill at different speeds, and asked to modulate stride length via visual feedback. Via principal component analysis, we extracted the global effects of the two factors on the peak-to-peak amplitude of joint torques. Next, we used a torque pulse approximation analysis to determine optimal timing and amplitude of torque pulses that approximate the SL-specific difference in joint torque profiles measured at different values of GS. Our results show a strong effect of GS on the torque profiles in all joints considered. In contrast, SL mostly affects the torque produced at the knee joint at early and late stance, with smaller effects on the hip and ankle joints. Our analysis generated a set of torque assistance profiles that will be experimentally tested using gait training robots. 
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