DocumentCode :
259931
Title :
Towards a brain computer interface driven exoskeleton for upper extremity rehabilitation
Author :
Zhen Gang Xiao ; Elnady, Ahmed M. ; Webb, Jacob ; Menon, Carlo
Author_Institution :
MENRVA Group, Simon Fraser Univ., Burnaby, BC, Canada
fYear :
2014
fDate :
12-15 Aug. 2014
Firstpage :
432
Lastpage :
437
Abstract :
Stroke impairs individuals to perform activities of daily living. Intense rehabilitation programs offer hope for recovery, but are labor intensive and costly. Robotic rehabilitation technology plays a key role to solve such a problem. Current robotic systems along with brain computer interface (BCI) allow patients to participate in rehabilitation exercises, which require their own mental inputs. Studies have shown such active rehabilitation exercise can induce neuroplasticity and help towards recovery. However, even though BCI-driven robotic systems do exist, they are large complex systems and expensive to set up. These drawbacks limit a wide distribution of these technologies. Currently, the BCI robotic systems only used in large hospitals or research settings, not community level facilities. To facilitate the accessibility of stroke patients to such technologies, we propose a novel BCI-driven exoskeleton rehabilitation system. The exoskeleton has four degrees of freedom (DOF) for assisting the movement of the upper extremities. It is integrated with an affordable and wireless EEG headset for enabling the patients to control the movement of the exoskeleton with their brain activity. The developed exoskeleton is portable and easy to set up. A sequential control scheme is proposed to allow the user to control one movement at a time. An experiment was designed to assess if a healthy individual was able to control the movement of the exoskeleton correctly under a predefined sequence. One volunteer participated in the exploratory study and the volunteer was able to correctly control the exoskeleton in each step.
Keywords :
bone; brain-computer interfaces; control engineering computing; diseases; electroencephalography; medical robotics; medical signal processing; motion control; neurophysiology; patient rehabilitation; BCI-driven exoskeleton rehabilitation system; BCI-driven robotic systems; DOF; brain activity; brain computer interface driven exoskeleton; degrees of freedom; mental inputs; movement assistance; movement control; neuroplasticity; patient recovery; rehabilitation exercises; rehabilitation programs; robotic rehabilitation technology; sequential control scheme; stroke patients; upper extremities; upper extremity rehabilitation; wireless EEG headset; Elbow; Electroencephalography; Exoskeletons; Headphones; Joints; Robots; Wrist;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (2014 5th IEEE RAS & EMBS International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Sao Paulo
ISSN :
2155-1774
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-3126-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/BIOROB.2014.6913815
Filename :
6913815
Link To Document :
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