Novin, Roya Sabbagh
Ergonomically Intelligent Physical Human-Robot Interaction: Postural Estimation, Assessment, and Optimization
Yazdani, Amir, Novin, Roya Sabbagh, Merryweather, Andrew, Hermans, Tucker
Ergonomics and human comfort are essential concerns in physical human-robot interaction applications, and common practical methods either fail in estimating the correct posture due to occlusion or suffer from less accurate ergonomics models in their postural optimization methods. Instead, we propose a novel framework for posture estimation, assessment, and optimization for ergonomically intelligent physical human-robot interaction. We show that we can estimate human posture solely from the trajectory of the interacting robot. We propose DULA, a differentiable ergonomics model, and use it in gradient-free postural optimization for physical human-robot interaction tasks such as co-manipulation and teleoperation. We evaluate our framework through human and simulation experiments.
DULA: A Differentiable Ergonomics Model for Postural Optimization in Physical HRI
Yazdani, Amir, Novin, Roya Sabbagh, Merryweather, Andrew, Hermans, Tucker
Ergonomics and human comfort are essential concerns in physical human-robot interaction applications. Defining an accurate and easy-to-use ergonomic assessment model stands as an important step in providing feedback for postural correction to improve operator health and comfort. In order to enable efficient computation, previously proposed automated ergonomic assessment and correction tools make approximations or simplifications to gold-standard assessment tools used by ergonomists in practice. In order to retain assessment quality, while improving computational considerations, we introduce DULA, a differentiable and continuous ergonomics model learned to replicate the popular and scientifically validated RULA assessment. We show that DULA provides assessment comparable to RULA while providing computational benefits. We highlight DULA's strength in a demonstration of gradient-based postural optimization for a simulated teleoperation task.
Optimizing Hospital Room Layout to Reduce the Risk of Patient Falls
Chaeibakhsh, Sarvenaz, Novin, Roya Sabbagh, Hermans, Tucker, Merryweather, Andrew, Kuntz, Alan
Despite years of research into patient falls in hospital rooms, falls and related injuries remain a serious concern to patient safety. In this work, we formulate a gradient-free constrained optimization problem to generate and reconfigure the hospital room interior layout to minimize the risk of falls. We define a cost function built on a hospital room fall model that takes into account the supportive or hazardous effect of the patient's surrounding objects, as well as simulated patient trajectories inside the room. We define a constraint set that ensures the functionality of the generated room layouts in addition to conforming to architectural guidelines. We solve this problem efficiently using a variant of simulated annealing. We present results for two real-world hospital room types and demonstrate a significant improvement of 18% on average in patient fall risk when compared with a traditional hospital room layout and 41% when compared with randomly generated layouts.