Carnegie Mellon Robotics Institute
Martijn Wisse, Chris Atkeson, and D.K. Kloimwieder
5th IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots, December, 2005, pp. 295 - 300.
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| Abstract |
| In human walking, the swing leg moves backward just prior to ground contact, i.e. the relative angle between the thighs is decreasing. We hypothesized that this swing leg retraction may have a positive effect on gait stability, because similar effects have been reported in passive dynamic walking models, in running models, and in robot juggling. For this study, we use a simple inverted pendulum model for the stance leg. The swing leg is assumed to accurately follow a time-based trajectory. The model walks down a shallow slope for energy input which is balanced by the impact losses at heel strike. With this model we show that a mild retraction speed indeed improves stability, while gaits without a retraction phase (the swing leg keeps moving forward) are consistently unstable. By walking with shorter steps or on a steeper slope, the range of stable retraction speeds increases, suggesting a better robustness. The conclusions of this paper are therefore twofold; (1) use a mild swing leg retraction speed for better stability, and (2) walking faster is easier. |
| Notes |
Number of pages: 6 |
| Text Reference |
| Martijn Wisse, Chris Atkeson, and D.K. Kloimwieder, "Swing leg retraction helps biped walking stability," 5th IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots, December, 2005, pp. 295 - 300. |
| BibTeX Reference |
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@inproceedings{Wisse_2005_5602, author = "Martijn Wisse and Chris Atkeson and D.K. Kloimwieder", title = "Swing leg retraction helps biped walking stability", booktitle = "5th IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots", pages = "295 - 300", month = "December", year = "2005", } |
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