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1.
Sci Robot ; 6(58): eabf1888, 2021 Sep 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34550719

ABSTRACT

During gait neurorehabilitation, many factors influence the quality of gait patterns, particularly the chosen body-weight support (BWS) device. Consequently, robotic BWS devices play a key role in gait rehabilitation of people with neurological disorders. The device transparency, support force vector direction, and attachment to the harness vary widely across existing robotic BWS devices, but the influence of these factors on the production of gait remains unknown. Because this information is key to designing an optimal BWS, we systematically studied these determinants in this work. We report that with a highly transparent device and a conventional harness, healthy participants select a small backward force when asked for optimal BWS conditions. This unexpected finding challenges the view that during human-robot interactions, humans predominantly optimize energy efficiency. Instead, they might seek to increase their feeling of stability and safety. We also demonstrate that the location of the attachment points on the harness strongly affects gait patterns, yet harness attachment is hardly reported in literature. Our results establish principles for the design of BWS devices and personalization of BWS settings for gait neurorehabilitation.


Subject(s)
Man-Machine Systems , Neurological Rehabilitation/methods , Robotics , Biomechanical Phenomena , Body Weight , Calibration , Equipment Design , Female , Gait , Humans , Male , Orthotic Devices , Patient Safety , User-Computer Interface , Walking
2.
IEEE Int Conf Rehabil Robot ; 2013: 6650512, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24187327

ABSTRACT

Gait and balance training is an essential ingredient for locomotor rehabilitation of patients with neurological impairments. Robotic overhead support systems may help these patients train, for example by relieving them of part of their body weight. However, there are only very few systems that provide support during overground gait, and these suffer from limited degrees of freedom and/or undesired interaction forces due to uncompensated robot dynamics, namely inertia. Here, we suggest a novel mechanical concept that is based on cable robot technology and that allows three-dimensional gait training while reducing apparent robot dynamics to a minimum. The solution does not suffer from the conventional drawback of cable robots, which is a limited workspace. Instead, displaceable deflection units follow the human subject above a large walking area. These deflection units are not actuated, instead they are implicitly displaced by means of the forces in the cables they deflect. This leads to an underactuated design, because the deflection units cannot be moved arbitrarily. However, the design still allows accurate control of a three-dimensional force vector acting on a human subject during gait. We describe the mechanical concept, the control concept, and we show first experimental results obtained with the device, including the force control performance during robot-supported overground gait of five human subjects without motor impairments.


Subject(s)
Biomechanical Phenomena/physiology , Exercise Therapy/instrumentation , Gait/physiology , Robotics/instrumentation , Walking/physiology , Adult , Body Weight , Equipment Design , Exercise Therapy/methods , Female , Humans , Male
3.
Theor Appl Genet ; 112(7): 1277-85, 2006 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16489429

ABSTRACT

Winterhardiness has three primary components: photoperiod (day length) sensitivity, vernalization response, and low temperature tolerance. Photoperiod and vernalization regulate the vegetative to reproductive phase transition, and photoperiod regulates expression of key vernalization genes. Using two barley mapping populations, we mapped six individual photoperiod response QTL and determined their positional relationship to the phytochrome and cryptochrome photoreceptor gene families and the vernalization regulatory genes HvBM5A, ZCCT-H, and HvVRT-2. Of the six photoreceptors mapped in the current study (HvPhyA and HvPhyB to 4HS, HvPhyC to 5HL, HvCry1a and HvCry2 to 6HS, and HvCry1b to 2HL), only HvPhyC coincided with a photoperiod response QTL. We recently mapped the candidate genes for the 5HL VRN-H1 (HvBM5A) and 4HL VRN-H2 (ZCCT-H) loci, and in this study, we mapped HvVRT-2, the barley TaVRT-2 ortholog (a wheat flowering repressor regulated by vernalization and photoperiod) to 7HS. Each of these three vernalization genes is located in chromosome regions determining small photoperiod response QTL effects. HvBM5A and HvPhyC are closely linked on 5HL and therefore are currently both positional candidates for the same photoperiod effect. The coincidence of photoperiod-responsive vernalization genes with photoperiod QTL suggests vernalization genes should also be considered candidates for photoperiod effects.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Genes, Plant , Hordeum/genetics , Photosynthetic Reaction Center Complex Proteins , Quantitative Trait Loci , Alleles , Chromosome Mapping , Chromosomes, Plant , Genome, Plant , Photoperiod
4.
Plant Cell Rep ; 21(8): 733-8, 2003 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12789516

ABSTRACT

An efficient plant regeneration system was developed for Hordeum vulgare L. 'Morex' barley, an important United States malting cultivar. The protocol was based on a series of experiments involving the sizes of immature embryos and the culture media. We found that the embryo size is critical for the establishment of embryogenic callus. Smaller embryos (0.5-1.5 mm) showed a much higher ability to produce embryogenic callus capable of regenerating green plants with fewer albinos than did the larger embryos (1.6-3.0 mm). Either 3 mg/l 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid or dicamba in modified Murashige and Skoog's (MS) medium was optimum for the induction of embryogenic callus. The embryogenic callus maintained high regeneration during six subcultures in the callus induction medium. Efficient shoot regeneration was obtained on modified MS medium containing 0.5-1.0 mg/l 6-benzylaminopurine (BA). Regenerated shoots were rooted on half-strength MS medium containing 0.2 mg/l IBA. Plants were successfully transferred to soil and grown to maturity in the greenhouse. This efficient plant regeneration system provides a foundation for generating transgenic plants of this important barley cultivar.


Subject(s)
Adenine/analogs & derivatives , Hordeum/physiology , Seeds/physiology , 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid/pharmacology , Adenine/pharmacology , Benzyl Compounds , Culture Techniques , Dicamba/pharmacology , Germination/drug effects , Hordeum/drug effects , Hordeum/embryology , Kinetin , Plant Growth Regulators/pharmacology , Plant Shoots/drug effects , Plant Shoots/physiology , Purines , Regeneration/drug effects , Seeds/drug effects , Seeds/embryology
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