DocumentCode
141780
Title
Design of Soft Human-Robot Interface Based on Neuro-Muscular-Skeletal Model
Author
Lei Shi ; Zhen Liu
Author_Institution
Grad. Sch. of Eng., Nagasaki Inst. of Appl. Sci., Nagasaki, Japan
fYear
2014
fDate
24-27 Aug. 2014
Firstpage
536
Lastpage
541
Abstract
In the design of rehabilitation robots aiming at people with special needs (i.e., elderly, people with impairments, or people with disabilities), the human-robot interface (HRI) is considered to be one of most difficult and important parts. It directly determines the patient safety, operation convenience and rehabilitation effectiveness of the whole system. The interface design mainly consists of two main parts, that is, hard and soft human-robot interface design that are labeled hHRI and sHRI respectively in the paper. hHRI is the physical human-robot interaction which transfers the power from robot to the patient or vice-versa. And sHRI is mainly a control interface between human and robot. After the robot mechanical structures being established, system function and performance is largely decided by sHRI. In the paper, in order to be able to do continuous control for robot motion and generate the desired supporting torque for patients with the actuation of the robot, the present work proposes a new sHRI that based on surface electromyography (sEMG) and human neuro-musculo-skeletal model. It can transform the body´s own neural command signal of sEMG recordings to kinematic variables that were used to control the rehabilitation robot. Under the work of sHRI, rehabilitation robot can offer assistance to patients during rehabilitation by guiding motions on correct training rehabilitation trajectories, or give force support to be able to perform certain motions at all. The mechanism is compelling from the standpoint of biomechanical analysis of human motion as well as the synthesis of artificial control. It may lead to seamless integration and an intuitive control of the controlled robot.
Keywords
actuators; electromyography; human-robot interaction; medical robotics; medical signal processing; motion control; patient rehabilitation; robot kinematics; trajectory control; HRI; hHRI; hard human-robot interface design; kinematic variables; neural command signal; neuro-muscular-skeletal model; operation convenience; patient safety; rehabilitation effectiveness; rehabilitation robot design; robot actuation; robot mechanical structures; robot motion control; sEMG; sHRI; soft human-robot interface design; surface electromyography; training rehabilitation trajectory; Force; Frequency modulation; Joints; Mathematical model; Muscles; Robots; Tendons;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Dependable, Autonomic and Secure Computing (DASC), 2014 IEEE 12th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Dalian
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-5078-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/DASC.2014.104
Filename
6945749
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