compensatory motion
A General Control Method for Human-Robot Integration
Feder, Maddalena, Grioli, Giorgio, Catalano, Manuel G., Bicchi, Antonio
Abstract--This paper introduces a new generalized control method designed for multi-degrees-of-freedom devices to help people with limited motion capabilities in their daily activities. The challenge lies in finding the most adapted strategy for the control interface to effectively map user's motions in a lowdimensional space to complex robotic assistive devices, such as prostheses, supernumerary limbs, up to remote robotic avatars. The goal is a system which integrates the human and the robotic parts into a unique system, moving so as to reach the targets decided by the human while autonomously reducing the user's effort and discomfort. We present a framework to control general multi DoFs assistive systems, which translates user-performed compensatory motions into the necessary robot commands for reaching targets while canceling or reducing compensation. The framework extends to prostheses of any number of DoF up to full robotic avatars, regarded here as a sort of "whole-body prosthesis" of the person who sees the robot as an artificial extension of their own body without a physical link but with a sensory-motor integration. We have validated and applied this control strategy through tests encompassing simulated scenarios and real-world trials involving a virtual twin of the robotic parts (prosthesis and robot) and a physical humanoid avatar. SSISTIVE and rehabilitation devices such as powered wheelchairs, assistive robotic arms, and limb prostheses play a crucial role in assisting individuals with severe motor impairments [1], which require daily assistance due to e.g.
- Europe > Switzerland (0.04)
- Europe > Italy > Tuscany > Pisa Province > Pisa (0.04)
- Asia > China > Shaanxi Province > Xi'an (0.04)
- Health & Medicine > Health Care Technology (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Neurology (0.93)
Multi-feature Compensatory Motion Analysis for Reaching Motions Over a Discretely Sampled Workspace
Yang, Qihan, Gloumakov, Yuri, Spiers, Adam J.
The absence of functional arm joints, such as the wrist, in upper extremity prostheses leads to compensatory motions in the users' daily activities. Compensatory motions have been previously studied for varying task protocols and evaluation metrics. However, the movement targets' spatial locations in previous protocols were not standardised and incomparable between studies, and the evaluation metrics were rudimentary. This work analysed compensatory motions in the final pose of subjects reaching across a discretely sampled 7*7 2D grid of targets under unbraced (normative) and braced (compensatory) conditions. For the braced condition, a bracing system was applied to simulate a transradial prosthetic limb by restricting participants' wrist joints. A total of 1372 reaching poses were analysed, and a Compensation Index was proposed to indicate the severity level of compensation. This index combined joint spatial location analysis, joint angle analysis, separability analysis, and machine learning (clustering) analysis. The individual analysis results and the final Compensation Index were presented in heatmap format to correspond to the spatial layout of the workspace, revealing the spatial dependency of compensatory motions. The results indicate that compensatory motions occur mainly in a right trapezoid region in the upper left area and a vertical trapezoid region in the middle left area for right-handed subjects reaching horizontally and vertically. Such results might guide motion selection in clinical rehabilitation, occupational therapy, and prosthetic evaluation to help avoid residual limb pain and overuse syndromes.
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Cambridge (0.04)
- North America > United States > California > Alameda County > Berkeley (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.04)
Kinematic analysis of a parallel robot for minimally invasive surgery
Vaida, Calin, Gherman, Bogdan, Birlescu, Iosif, Tucan, Paul, Pusca, Alexandru, Rus, Gabriela, Chablat, Damien, Pisla, Doina
The paper presents the kinematic modelling for the coupled motion of a 6-DOF surgical parallel robot PARA-SILSROB which guides a mobile platform carrying the surgical instruments, and the actuators of the sub-modules which hold these tools. To increase the surgical procedure safety, a closed form solution for the kinematic model is derived and then, the forward and inverse kinematic models for the mobile orientation platform are obtained. The kinematic models are used in numerical simulations for the reorientation of the endoscopic camera, which imposes an automated compensatory motion from the active instruments' mod-ules.
- Europe > Romania > Nord-Vest Development Region > Cluj County > Cluj-Napoca (0.05)
- Europe > France > Pays de la Loire > Loire-Atlantique > Nantes (0.05)
- North America > United States > Missouri > St. Louis County > St. Louis (0.04)
- (2 more...)
- Health & Medicine > Surgery (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Health Care Technology (0.90)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Oncology (0.30)
Exploring a Gradient-based Explainable AI Technique for Time-Series Data: A Case Study of Assessing Stroke Rehabilitation Exercises
Explainable artificial intelligence (AI) techniques are increasingly being explored to provide insights into why AI and machine learning (ML) models provide a certain outcome in various applications. However, there has been limited exploration of explainable AI techniques on time-series data, especially in the healthcare context. In this paper, we describe a threshold-based method that utilizes a weakly supervised model and a gradient-based explainable AI technique (i.e. saliency map) and explore its feasibility to identify salient frames of time-series data. Using the dataset from 15 post-stroke survivors performing three upper-limb exercises and labels on whether a compensatory motion is observed or not, we implemented a feed-forward neural network model and utilized gradients of each input on model outcomes to identify salient frames that involve compensatory motions. According to the evaluation using frame-level annotations, our approach achieved a recall of 0.96 and an F2-score of 0.91. Our results demonstrated the potential of a gradient-based explainable AI technique (e.g. saliency map) for time-series data, such as highlighting the frames of a video that therapists should focus on reviewing and reducing the efforts on frame-level labeling for model training.
- Asia > Singapore (0.05)
- North America > Canada (0.04)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Natural Language > Explanation & Argumentation (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Issues > Social & Ethical Issues (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Neural Networks > Deep Learning (0.69)