2025

arXiv

A real-time full-chain wearable sensor-based musculoskeletal simulation: an OpenSim-ROS Integration

Frederico Belmonte Klein, Zhaoyuan Wan, Huawei Wang, Ruoli Wang

KTH MoveAbility, Department of Engineering Mechanics, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

Keywords

biomechanics, robotics, rehabilitation, inertial measurement unit, wireless pressure insole, augmented reality marker

Abstract

Musculoskeletal modeling and simulations enable the accurate description and analysis of the movement of biological systems with applications such as rehabilitation assessment, prosthesis, and exoskeleton design. However, the widespread usage of these techniques is limited by costly sensors, laboratory-based setups, computationally demanding processes, and the use of diverse software tools that often lack seamless integration. In this work, we address these limitations by proposing an integrated, real-time framework for musculoskeletal modeling and simulations that leverages OpenSimRT, the robotics operating system (ROS), and wearable sensors. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate that this framework can reasonably well describe inverse kinematics of both lower and upper body using either inertial measurement units or fiducial markers. Additionally, we show that it can effectively estimate inverse dynamics of the ankle joint and muscle activations of major lower limb muscles during daily activities, including walking, squatting and sit to stand, stand to sit when combined with pressure insoles. We believe this work lays the groundwork for further studies with more complex real-time and wearable sensor-based human movement analysis systems and holds potential to advance technologies in rehabilitation, robotics and exoskeleton designs.

Moticon's Summary

This paper presents an integrated, real-time framework for musculoskeletal modeling and simulation using OpenSim and ROS. The Moticon OpenGo sensor insoles were a key component of the wearable sensor setup, providing real-time normal ground reaction force (GRF) and center of pressure (COP) data at 100Hz. This data was essential for the inverse dynamics calculations, allowing the system to estimate joint torques and muscle activations for the lower limbs during daily activities such as walking, squatting, and sit-to-stand transitions. The study highlights the successful integration of the wireless pressure insoles into a full-chain, real-time biomechanical analysis pipeline, demonstrating their suitability for analyzing quasi-static or symmetrical lower-body activities in out-of-lab settings.

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