• DocumentCode
    1390323
  • Title

    Multimodal Interfaces to Improve Therapeutic Outcomes in Robot-Assisted Rehabilitation

  • Author

    Badesa, Francisco Javier ; Morales, Ricardo ; García-Aracil, Nicolás ; Sabater, José María ; Pérez-Vidal, Carlos ; Fernández, Eduardo

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. Miguel Hernandez of Elche, Elche, Spain
  • Volume
    42
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2012
  • Firstpage
    1152
  • Lastpage
    1158
  • Abstract
    The paper presents the developing of a new robotic system for the administration of a highly sophisticated therapy to stroke patients. This therapy is able to maximize patient motivation and involvement in the therapy and continuously assess the progress of the recovery from the functional viewpoint. Current robotic rehabilitation systems do not include patient information on the control loop. The main novelty of the presented approach is to close patient in the loop and use multisensory data (such as pulse, skin conductance, skin temperature, position, velocity, etc.) to adaptively and dynamically change complexity of the therapy and real-time displays of a virtual reality system in accordance with specific patient requirements. First, an analysis of subject´s physiological responses to different tasks is presented with the objective to select the best candidate of physiological signals to estimate the patient physiological state during the execution of a virtual rehabilitation task. Then, the design of a prototype of multimodal robotic platform is defined and developed to validate the scientific value of the proposed approach.
  • Keywords
    computational complexity; control engineering computing; medical computing; medical robotics; patient rehabilitation; patient treatment; virtual reality; highly sophisticated therapy; multimodal interfaces; multisensory data; physiological signals; robot-assisted rehabilitation; robotic rehabilitation systems; stroke patients; therapeutic outcomes; therapy complexity; virtual reality system; virtual rehabilitation task; Gesture recognition; Human-robot interaction; Man machine systems; Multimodal sensors; Robots; User interfaces; Control; multimodal interfaces; physiological state; rehabilitation robotic;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part C: Applications and Reviews, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1094-6977
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TSMCC.2012.2201938
  • Filename
    6392456