admittance controller
Control of Powered Ankle-Foot Prostheses on Compliant Terrain: A Quantitative Approach to Stability Enhancement
Karakasis, Chrysostomos, Scully, Camryn, Salati, Robert, Artemiadis, Panagiotis
Walking on compliant terrain presents a substantial challenge for individuals with lower-limb amputation, further elevating their already high risk of falling. While powered ankle-foot prostheses have demonstrated adaptability across speeds and rigid terrains, control strategies optimized for soft or compliant surfaces remain underexplored. This work experimentally validates an admittance-based control strategy that dynamically adjusts the quasi-stiffness of powered prostheses to enhance gait stability on compliant ground. Human subject experiments were conducted with three healthy individuals walking on two bilaterally compliant surfaces with ground stiffness values of 63 and 25 kN/m, representative of real-world soft environments. Controller performance was quantified using phase portraits and two walking stability metrics, offering a direct assessment of fall risk. Compared to a standard phase-variable controller developed for rigid terrain, the proposed admittance controller consistently improved gait stability across all compliant conditions. These results demonstrate the potential of adaptive, stability-aware prosthesis control to reduce fall risk in real-world environments and advance the robustness of human-prosthesis interaction in rehabilitation robotics.
- North America > United States > Delaware > New Castle County > Newark (0.14)
- North America > United States > Texas > Harris County > Houston (0.04)
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Suffolk County > South Boston (0.04)
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- Research Report > New Finding (1.00)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Health Care Technology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Orthopedics/Orthopedic Surgery (0.46)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.46)
Robot and Overhead Crane Collaboration Scheme to Enhance Payload Manipulation
Rosales, Antonio, Abderrahim, Alaa, Suomalainen, Markku, Haag, Mikael, Heikkilä, Tapio
This paper presents a scheme to enhance payload manipulation using a robot collaborating with an overhead crane. In the current industrial practice, when the crane's payload has to be accurately manipulated and located in a desired position, the task becomes laborious and risky since the operators have to guide the fine motions of the payload by hand. In the proposed collaborative scheme, the crane lifts the payload while the robot's end-effector guides it toward the desired position. The only link between the robot and the crane is the interaction force produced during the guiding of the payload. Two admittance transfer functions are considered to accomplish harmless and smooth contact with the payload. The first is used in a position-based admittance control integrated with the robot. The second one adds compliance to the crane by processing the interaction force through the admittance transfer function to generate a crane's velocity command that makes the crane follow the payload. Then the robot's end-effector and the crane move collaboratively to guide the payload to the desired location. A method is presented to design the admittance controllers that accomplish a fluent robot-crane collaboration. Simulations and experiments validating the scheme potential are shown.
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Kantō > Tokyo Metropolis Prefecture > Tokyo (0.14)
- Europe > Finland > Northern Ostrobothnia > Oulu (0.05)
- South America > Colombia (0.04)
Mass-Adaptive Admittance Control for Robotic Manipulators
Gholampour, Hossein, Slightam, Jonathon E., Beaver, Logan E.
Handling objects with unknown or changing masses is a common challenge in robotics, often leading to errors or instability if the control system cannot adapt in real-time. In this paper, we present a novel approach that enables a six-degrees-of-freedom robotic manipulator to reliably follow waypoints while automatically estimating and compensating for unknown payload weight. Our method integrates an admittance control framework with a mass estimator, allowing the robot to dynamically update an excitation force to compensate for the payload mass. This strategy mitigates end-effector sagging and preserves stability when handling objects of unknown weights. We experimentally validated our approach in a challenging pick-and-place task on a shelf with a crossbar, improved accuracy in reaching waypoints and compliant motion compared to a baseline admittance-control scheme. By safely accommodating unknown payloads, our work enhances flexibility in robotic automation and represents a significant step forward in adaptive control for uncertain environments.
- North America > United States > Virginia > Norfolk City County > Norfolk (0.04)
- North America > United States > New Mexico > Bernalillo County > Albuquerque (0.04)
- Energy (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.94)
Design and Development of a Locomotion Interface for Virtual Reality Lower-Body Haptic Interaction
He, An-Chi, Park, Jungsoo, Beiter, Benjamin, Kalita, Bhaben, Leonessa, Alexander
This work presents the design, build, control, and preliminary user data of a locomotion interface called ForceBot. It delivers lower-body haptic interaction in virtual reality (VR), enabling users to walk in VR while interacting with various simulated terrains. It utilizes two planar gantries to give each foot two degrees of freedom and passive heel-lifting motion. The design used motion capture data with dynamic simulation for ergonomic human-robot workspace and hardware selection. Its system framework uses open-source robotic software and pairs with a custom-built power delivery system that offers EtherCAT communication with a 1,000 Hz soft real-time computation rate. This system features an admittance controller to regulate physical human-robot interaction (pHRI) alongside a walking algorithm to generate walking motion and simulate virtual terrains. The system's performance is explored through three measurements that evaluate the relationship between user input force and output pHRI motion. Overall, this platform presents a unique approach by utilizing planar gantries to realize VR terrain interaction with an extensive workspace, reasonably compact footprint, and preliminary user data.
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- North America > United States > Florida > Palm Beach County > Boca Raton (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Los Angeles (0.04)
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Chūbu > Nagano Prefecture > Nagano (0.04)
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
- Information Technology (0.68)
- Energy > Power Industry (0.46)
- Education > Curriculum > Subject-Specific Education (0.46)
Vision-Based Fuzzy Control System for Smart Walkers: Enhancing Usability for Stroke Survivors with Unilateral Upper Limb Impairments
Chalaki, Mahdi, Zakerimanesh, Amir, Soleymani, Abed, Mushahwar, Vivian, Tavakoli, Mahdi
Mobility impairments, particularly those caused by stroke-induced hemiparesis, significantly impact independence and quality of life. Current smart walker controllers operate by using input forces from the user to control linear motion and input torques to dictate rotational movement; however, because they predominantly rely on user-applied torque exerted on the device handle as an indicator of user intent to turn, they fail to adequately accommodate users with unilateral upper limb impairments. This leads to increased physical strain and cognitive load. This paper introduces a novel smart walker equipped with a fuzzy control algorithm that leverages shoulder abduction angles to intuitively interpret user intentions using just one functional hand. By integrating a force sensor and stereo camera, the system enhances walker responsiveness and usability. Experimental evaluations with five participants showed that the fuzzy controller outperformed the traditional admittance controller, reducing wrist torque while using the right hand to operate the walker by 12.65% for left turns, 80.36% for straight paths, and 81.16% for right turns. Additionally, average user comfort ratings on a Likert scale increased from 1 to 4. Results confirmed a strong correlation between shoulder abduction angles and directional intent, with users reporting decreased effort and enhanced ease of use. This study contributes to assistive robotics by providing an adaptable control mechanism for smart walkers, suggesting a pathway towards enhancing mobility and independence for individuals with mobility impairments.
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- North America > Canada > Alberta > Census Division No. 11 > Edmonton Metropolitan Region > Edmonton (0.04)
- Asia > China (0.04)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (1.00)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.69)
Aerial Assistive Payload Transportation Using Quadrotor UAVs with Nonsingular Fast Terminal SMC for Human Physical Interaction
Naser, Hussein, Hashim, Hashim A., Ahmadi, Mojtaba
This paper presents a novel approach to utilizing underactuated quadrotor Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) as assistive devices in cooperative payload transportation task through human guidance and physical interaction. The proposed system consists of two underactuated UAVs rigidly connected to the transported payload. This task involves the collaboration between human and UAVs to transport and manipulate a payload. The goal is to reduce the workload of the human and enable seamless interaction between the human operator and the aerial vehicle. An Admittance-Nonsingular Fast Terminal Sliding Mode Control (NFTSMC) is employed to control and asymptotically stabilize the system while performing the task, where forces are applied to the payload by the human operator dictate the aerial vehicle's motion. The stability of the proposed controller is confirmed using Lyapunov analysis. Extensive simulation studies were conducted using MATLAB, Robot Operating System (ROS), and Gazebo to validate robustness and effectiveness of the proposed controller in assisting with payload transportation tasks. Results demonstrates feasibility and potential benefits utilizing quadrotor UAVs as assistive devices for payload transportation through intuitive human-guided control. Keywords Cooperative payload transportation, Admittance control, Sliding mode control, Quadrotor control
- Construction & Engineering (0.93)
- Aerospace & Defense > Aircraft (0.48)
- Energy > Oil & Gas (0.46)
- Information Technology > Robotics & Automation (0.34)
Admittance Visuomotor Policy Learning for General-Purpose Contact-Rich Manipulations
Zhou, Bo, Jiao, Ruixuan, Li, Yi, Yuan, Xiaogang, Fang, Fang, Li, Shihua
Contact force in contact-rich environments is an essential modality for robots to perform general-purpose manipulation tasks, as it provides information to compensate for the deficiencies of visual and proprioceptive data in collision perception, high-precision grasping, and efficient manipulation. In this paper, we propose an admittance visuomotor policy framework for continuous, general-purpose, contact-rich manipulations. During demonstrations, we designed a low-cost, user-friendly teleoperation system with contact interaction, aiming to gather compliant robot demonstrations and accelerate the data collection process. During training and inference, we propose a diffusion-based model to plan action trajectories and desired contact forces from multimodal observation that includes contact force, vision and proprioception. We utilize an admittance controller for compliance action execution. A comparative evaluation with two state-of-the-art methods was conducted on five challenging tasks, each focusing on different action primitives, to demonstrate our framework's generalization capabilities. Results show our framework achieves the highest success rate and exhibits smoother and more efficient contact compared to other methods, the contact force required to complete each tasks was reduced on average by 48.8%, and the success rate was increased on average by 15.3%. Videos are available at https://ryanjiao.github.io/AdmitDiffPolicy/.
Direction-Constrained Control for Efficient Physical Human-Robot Interaction under Hierarchical Tasks
Xu, Mengxin, Wan, Weiwei, Wang, Hesheng, Harada, Kensuke
--This paper proposes a control method to address the physical Human-Robot Interaction (pHRI) challenge in the context of hierarchical tasks. A common approach to managing hierarchical tasks is Hierarchical Quadratic Programming (HQP), which, however, cannot be directly applied to human interaction due to its allowance of arbitrary velocity direction adjustments. T o resolve this limitation, we introduce the concept of directional constraints and develop a direction-constrained optimization algorithm to handle the nonlinearities induced by these constraints. The algorithm solves two sub-problems, minimizing the error and minimizing the deviation angle, in parallel, and combines the results of the two sub-problems to produce a final optimal outcome. The mutual influence between these two sub-problems is analyzed to determine the best parameter for combination. Additionally, the velocity objective in our control framework is computed using a variable admittance controller . Traditional admittance control does not account for constraints. T o address this issue, we propose a variable admittance control method to adjust control objectives dynamically. The method helps reduce the deviation between robot velocity and human intention at the constraint boundaries, thereby enhancing interaction efficiency. We evaluate the proposed method in scenarios where a human operator physically interacts with a 7-degree-of-freedom robotic arm. Compared to existing methods, our approach generates smoother robotic trajectories during interaction while avoiding interaction delays at the constraint boundaries. Recent advancements in physical Human-Robot Interaction (pHRI) have significantly improved robots' abilities to support individuals [1] [2]. For example, pHRI has shown promising results in tasks such as load transportation [3], collaborative drawing [4], surface polishing [5], assembly [6], rehabilitation [7], etc. This work was conducted while Mengxin Xu was a visiting researcher at Osaka University, Japan. It was partially supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant 62225309, 62073222, U21A20480 and U1913204. Mengxin Xu is with the Department of Automation, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China (e-mail: mengxin xu@sjtu.edu.cn). Weiwei Wan and Kensuke Harada are with the Department of System Innovation, Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan (e-mail: wan@sys.es.osaka-u.ac.jp, harada@sys.es.osaka-u.ac.jp). Hesheng Wang is with the Department of Automation, the Key Laboratory of System Control and Information Processing of Ministry of Education and the Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Intelligent Control and Management, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China (email: wanghesheng@sjtu.edu.cn). In pHRI, the robot can reduce both the physical and cognitive load on humans, while humans contribute valuable guidance based on their experience.
Controller design and experimental evaluation of a motorised assistance for a patient transfer floor lift
Callon, Donatien, Lalonde, Ian, Nadeau, Mathieu, Girard, Alexandre
Patient transfer is a challenging, critical task because it exposes caregivers to injury risks. Available transfer devices, like floor lifts, lead to improvements but are far from perfect. They do not eliminate the caregivers risk of musculoskeletal disorders, and they can be burdensome to use due to their poor maneuverability. This paper presents a new motorized floor lift with a single central motorized wheel connected to an instrumented handle. Admittance controllers are designed to 1) improve the device maneuverability, 2) reduce the required caregiver effort, and 3) ensure the security and comfort of patients. Two controller designs, one with a linear admittance law and a non-linear admittance law with variable damping, were developed and implemented on a prototype. Tests were performed on seven participants to evaluate the performance of the assistance system and the controllers. The experimental results show that 1) the motorized assistance with the variable damping controller improves maneuverability by 28%, 2) reduces the amount of effort required to push the lift by 66% and 3) provides the same level of patient comfort compared to a standard unassisted floor lift.
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- Asia > China (0.04)
- North America > Canada > Quebec > Estrie Region > Sherbrooke (0.04)
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- Research Report > New Finding (0.48)
- Research Report > Experimental Study (0.46)
A Personalizable Controller for the Walking Assistive omNi-Directional Exo-Robot (WANDER)
Fortuna, A., Lorenzini, M., Leonori, M., Gandarias, JM., Balatti, P., Cho, Y., De Momi, E., Ajoudani, A.
Preserving and encouraging mobility in the elderly and adults with chronic conditions is of paramount importance. However, existing walking aids are either inadequate to provide sufficient support to users' stability or too bulky and poorly maneuverable to be used outside hospital environments. In addition, they all lack adaptability to individual requirements. To address these challenges, this paper introduces WANDER, a novel Walking Assistive omNi-Directional Exo-Robot. It consists of an omnidirectional platform and a robust aluminum structure mounted on top of it, which provides partial body weight support. A comfortable and minimally restrictive coupling interface embedded with a force/torque sensor allows to detect users' intentions, which are translated into command velocities by means of a variable admittance controller. An optimization technique based on users' preferences, i.e., Preference-Based Optimization (PBO) guides the choice of the admittance parameters (i.e., virtual mass and damping) to better fit subject-specific needs and characteristics. Experiments with twelve healthy subjects exhibited a significant decrease in energy consumption and jerk when using WANDER with PBO parameters as well as improved user performance and comfort. The great interpersonal variability in the optimized parameters highlights the importance of personalized control settings when walking with an assistive device, aiming to enhance users' comfort and mobility while ensuring reliable physical support.
- Health & Medicine > Health Care Providers & Services (0.34)
- Health & Medicine > Epidemiology (0.34)