A parallel mechanism of the shoulder—application to multi-body optimisation
Author(s) -
Aimad El Habachi,
Sonia Duprey,
Laurence Chèze,
Raphaël Dumas
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
multibody system dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.852
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1573-272X
pISSN - 1384-5640
DOI - 10.1007/s11044-014-9418-7
Subject(s) - scapula , kinematics , shoulder girdle , acromioclavicular joint , clavicle , kinematic diagram , constraint (computer aided design) , mechanism (biology) , kinematic chain , shoulder joint , computer science , acromion , mathematics , anatomy , geometry , medicine , rotator cuff , physics , classical mechanics , quantum mechanics
International audienceThis paper describes and evaluates a parallel mechanism of the shoulder girdle. This mechanism was a closed kinematic chain composed of three segments (humerus, scapula and thorax) and three kinematic constraints. The clavicle was modelled as a constant length constraint between the sternoclavicular and acromioclavicular joint centres. The second kinematic constraint was also a constant length between the glenoid cavity and the humeral head for the glenohumeral joint. The third constraint was a point-on-ellipsoid contact for the scapulothoracic joint. Geometrical data required to build this kinematic model were obtained from the Visible Human Project.The parallel mechanism was then introduced into a multi-body optimisation for the computation of the scapulothoracic joint angles from surface sensors during the abduction of the arm of six able-bodied subjects. The initial guess of this optimisation was obtained by an acromial method. Compared to palpation of scapula anatomical landmarks, the multi-body optimisation with the proposed parallel mechanism allows estimating the shoulder kinematics with a better accuracy than the acromial method alone
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