Assistive Control System for Upper Limb Rehabilitation Robot.

Sung-Hua Chen, Wei-Ming Lien, Wei-Wen Wang, Guan-De Lee, Li-Chun Hsu, Kai-Wen Lee, Sheng-Yen Lin, Chia-Hsun Lin, Li-Chen Fu, Jin-Shin Lai, Jer-Junn Luh, Wen-Shiang Chen
Author Information

Abstract

This paper presents an assistive control system with a special kinematic structure of an upper limb rehabilitation robot embedded with force/torque sensors. A dynamic human model integrated with sensing torque is used to simulate human interaction under three rehabilitation modes: active mode, assistive mode, and passive mode. The hereby proposed rehabilitation robot, called NTUH-ARM, provides 7 degree-of- freedom (DOF) motion and runs subject to an inherent mapping between the 7 DOFs of the robot arm and the 4 DOFs of the human arm. The Lyapunov theory is used to analyze the stability of the proposed controller design. Clinical trials have been conducted with six patients, one of which acts as a control. The results of these experiments are positive and STREAM assessment by physical therapists also reveals promising results.

MeSH Term

Arm
Biofeedback, Psychology
Equipment Design
Equipment Failure Analysis
Exoskeleton Device
Humans
Models, Biological
Motion Therapy, Continuous Passive
Movement Disorders
Neurological Rehabilitation
Robotics
Therapy, Computer-Assisted

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