Predictive Exoskeleton Control for Arm-Motion Augmentation Based on Probabilistic Movement Primitives Combined with a Flow Controller
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In: IEEE robotics and automation letters, Vol. 6.2021, No. 3, 9387088, 25.03.2021, p. 4417-4424.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Predictive Exoskeleton Control for Arm-Motion Augmentation Based on Probabilistic Movement Primitives Combined with a Flow Controller
AU - Jamsek, Marko
AU - Kunavar, Tjasa
AU - Bobek, Urban
AU - Rueckert, Elmar
AU - Babic, Jan
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2016 IEEE.
PY - 2021/3/25
Y1 - 2021/3/25
N2 - There are many work-related repetitive tasks where the application of exoskeletons could significantly reduce the physical effort by assisting the user in moving the arms towards the desired location in space. To make such control more user acceptable, the controller should be able to predict the motion of the user and act accordingly. This letter presents an exoskeleton control method that utilizes probabilistic movement primitives to generate predictions of user movements in real-time. These predictions are used in a flow controller, which represents a novel velocity-field-based exoskeleton control approach to provide assistance to the user in a predictive way. We evaluated our approach with a haptic robot, where a group of twelve participants had to perform movements towards different target locations in the frontal plane. We tested whether we could generalize the predictions for new and unknown target locations whilst providing assistance to the user without changing their kinematic parameters. The evaluation showed that we could accurately predict user movement intentions while at the same time significantly decrease the overall physical effort exerted by the participants to achieve the task.
AB - There are many work-related repetitive tasks where the application of exoskeletons could significantly reduce the physical effort by assisting the user in moving the arms towards the desired location in space. To make such control more user acceptable, the controller should be able to predict the motion of the user and act accordingly. This letter presents an exoskeleton control method that utilizes probabilistic movement primitives to generate predictions of user movements in real-time. These predictions are used in a flow controller, which represents a novel velocity-field-based exoskeleton control approach to provide assistance to the user in a predictive way. We evaluated our approach with a haptic robot, where a group of twelve participants had to perform movements towards different target locations in the frontal plane. We tested whether we could generalize the predictions for new and unknown target locations whilst providing assistance to the user without changing their kinematic parameters. The evaluation showed that we could accurately predict user movement intentions while at the same time significantly decrease the overall physical effort exerted by the participants to achieve the task.
KW - Physical human-robot interaction
KW - physically assistive devices
KW - prosthetics and exoskeletons
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103251228&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/LRA.2021.3068892
DO - 10.1109/LRA.2021.3068892
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85103251228
VL - 6.2021
SP - 4417
EP - 4424
JO - IEEE robotics and automation letters
JF - IEEE robotics and automation letters
SN - 2377-3766
IS - 3
M1 - 9387088
ER -