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 smart wheelchair


CoNav Chair: Development and Evaluation of a Shared Control based Wheelchair for the Built Environment

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

As the global population of people with disabilities (PWD) continues to grow, so will the need for mobility solutions that promote independent living and social integration. Wheelchairs are vital for the mobility of PWD in both indoor and outdoor environments. The current SOTA in powered wheelchairs is based on either manually controlled or fully autonomous modes of operation, offering limited flexibility and often proving difficult to navigate in spatially constrained environments. Moreover, research on robotic wheelchairs has focused predominantly on complete autonomy or improved manual control; approaches that can compromise efficiency and user trust. To overcome these challenges, this paper introduces the CoNav Chair, a smart wheelchair based on the Robot Operating System (ROS) and featuring shared control navigation and obstacle avoidance capabilities that are intended to enhance navigational efficiency, safety, and ease of use for the user. The paper outlines the CoNav Chair's design and presents a preliminary usability evaluation comparing three distinct navigation modes, namely, manual, shared, and fully autonomous, conducted with 21 healthy, unimpaired participants traversing an indoor building environment. Study findings indicated that the shared control navigation framework had significantly fewer collisions and performed comparably, if not superior to the autonomous and manual modes, on task completion time, trajectory length, and smoothness; and was perceived as being safer and more efficient based on user reported subjective assessments of usability. Overall, the CoNav system demonstrated acceptable safety and performance, laying the foundation for subsequent usability testing with end users, namely, PWDs who rely on a powered wheelchair for mobility.


CoNav Chair: Design of a ROS-based Smart Wheelchair for Shared Control Navigation in the Built Environment

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

With the number of people with disabilities (PWD) increasing worldwide each year, the demand for mobility support to enable independent living and social integration is also growing. Wheelchairs commonly support the mobility of PWD in both indoor and outdoor environments. However, current powered wheelchairs (PWC) often fail to meet the needs of PWD, who may find it difficult to operate them. Furthermore, existing research on robotic wheelchairs typically focuses either on full autonomy or enhanced manual control, which can lead to reduced efficiency and user trust. To address these issues, this paper proposes a Robot Operating System (ROS)-based smart wheelchair, called CoNav Chair, that incorporates a shared control navigation algorithm and obstacle avoidance to support PWD while fostering efficiency and trust between the robot and the user. Our design consists of hardware and software components. Experimental results conducted in a typical indoor social environment demonstrate the performance and effectiveness of the smart wheelchair hardware and software design. This integrated design promotes trust and autonomy, which are crucial for the acceptance of assistive mobility technologies in the built environment.


Development of a Modular Real-time Shared-control System for a Smart Wheelchair

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In this paper, we propose a modular navigation system that can be mounted on a regular powered wheelchair to assist disabled children and the elderly with autonomous mobility and shared-control features. The lack of independent mobility drastically affects an individual's mental and physical health making them feel less self-reliant, especially children with Cerebral Palsy and limited cognitive skills. To address this problem, we propose a comparatively inexpensive and modular system that uses a stereo camera to perform tasks such as path planning, obstacle avoidance, and collision detection in environments with narrow corridors. We avoid any major changes to the hardware of the wheelchair for an easy installation by replacing wheel encoders with a stereo camera for visual odometry. An open source software package, the Real-Time Appearance Based Mapping package, running on top of the Robot Operating System (ROS) allows us to perform visual SLAM that allows mapping and localizing itself in the environment. The path planning is performed by the move base package provided by ROS, which quickly and efficiently computes the path trajectory for the wheelchair. In this work, we present the design and development of the system along with its significant functionalities. Further, we report experimental results from a Gazebo simulation and real-world scenarios to prove the effectiveness of our proposed system with a compact form factor and a single stereo camera.