DocumentCode
1412382
Title
Development of a Hand-Assist Robot With Multi-Degrees-of-Freedom for Rehabilitation Therapy
Author
Ueki, Satoshi ; Kawasaki, Haruhisa ; Ito, Satoshi ; Nishimoto, Yutaka ; Abe, Motoyuki ; Aoki, Takaaki ; Ishigure, Yasuhiko ; Ojika, Takeo ; Mouri, Tetsuya
Author_Institution
Toyota Nat. Coll. of Technol., Toyota, Japan
Volume
17
Issue
1
fYear
2012
Firstpage
136
Lastpage
146
Abstract
This paper presents a virtual reality (VR)-enhanced new hand rehabilitation support system that enables patients to exercise alone. This system features a multi-degrees-of-freedom (DOF) motion assistance robot, a VR interface for patients, and a symmetrical master-slave motion assistance training strategy called "self-motion control," in which the stroke patient\´s healthy hand on the master side creates the assistance motion for the impaired hand on the slave side. To assist in performing the fine exercise motions needed for functional recovery of the impaired hand, the robot was constructed in an exoskeleton with 18 DOFs, to assist finger and thumb independent motions such as flexion/extension and abduction/adduction, thumb opposability, and hand-wrist co- ordinated motions. To enhance the effectiveness of the exercises, audio-visual instructions of each training motion using VR technology were designed with the input of clinician researchers. Experimental results from healthy subjects and patients show sufficient performance in the range of motion of the robot as well as sufficient assistance forces.
Keywords
control engineering computing; medical robotics; mobile robots; motion control; patient rehabilitation; patient treatment; user interfaces; virtual reality; VR interface; abduction-adduction; audio-visual instructions; flexion-extension; hand rehabilitation support system; hand-assist robot development; hand-wrist coordinated motions; impaired hand functional recovery; multidegrees-of-freedom motion assistance robot; rehabilitation therapy; selfmotion control; symmetrical master-slave motion assistance training strategy; thumb opposability; virtual reality; DC motors; Humans; Joints; Medical treatment; Robots; Thumb; Wrist; Hand rehabilitation; master slave; self-motion control; thumb opposition; virtual reality (VR);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Mechatronics, IEEE/ASME Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4435
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TMECH.2010.2090353
Filename
5675692
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