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Automated Author Profile

Carpenter, R. Dana

Current S-Index

4.2

Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets

Average Dataset Index per Dataset

2.1

Average Dataset Index per dataset

Total Datasets

2

Total datasets for this author

Average FAIR Score

80.8%

Average FAIR Score per dataset

Total Citations

2

Total citations to the author's datasets

Total Mentions

0

Total mentions of the author's datasets

S-Index Interpretation

S-Index Over Time

Cumulative Citations Over Time

Cumulative Mentions Over Time

Datasets

Feasibility of predicting changes in gait biomechanics following muscle strength perturbations using optimal control in patients with transfemoral amputation

Bone-anchored limbs (BALs) are socket prosthesis alternatives, directly fixing to residual bone via osseointegrated implant. There is a need to quantify multi-level effects of rehabilitation for transfemoral BAL users (i.e. changes in joint loading and movement patterns). Our primary objective was determining feasibility of using optimal control to predict gait biomechanics compared to ground-truth experimental data from transfemoral BAL users. A secondary objective was examining biomechanical effects from estimated changes in hip abductor muscle strength. We developed and validated a workflow for predicting gait biomechanics in four transfemoral BAL users and investigated the biomechanical effects of altered hip abductor strengths.

Authors

  • Vandenberg, Nicholas W. ;
  • Wheatley, Benjamin B. ;
  • Carpenter, R. Dana ;
  • Christiansen, Cory L. ;
  • Stoneback, Jason W. ;
  • Gaffney, Brecca M. M.
1 Citation0 Mentions81% FAIR2.1 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.26982696January 2024

Feasibility of predicting changes in gait biomechanics following muscle strength perturbations using optimal control in patients with transfemoral amputation

Bone-anchored limbs (BALs) are socket prosthesis alternatives, directly fixing to residual bone via osseointegrated implant. There is a need to quantify multi-level effects of rehabilitation for transfemoral BAL users (i.e. changes in joint loading and movement patterns). Our primary objective was determining feasibility of using optimal control to predict gait biomechanics compared to ground-truth experimental data from transfemoral BAL users. A secondary objective was examining biomechanical effects from estimated changes in hip abductor muscle strength. We developed and validated a workflow for predicting gait biomechanics in four transfemoral BAL users and investigated the biomechanical effects of altered hip abductor strengths.

Authors

  • Vandenberg, Nicholas W. ;
  • Wheatley, Benjamin B. ;
  • Carpenter, R. Dana ;
  • Christiansen, Cory L. ;
  • Stoneback, Jason W. ;
  • Gaffney, Brecca M. M.
1 Citation0 Mentions81% FAIR2.1 Dataset Index
10.6084/m9.figshare.26982696.v1January 2024