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An architecture for rehabilitation task practice in socially assistive human-robot interaction

Ross Mead, Eric Wade, P. Johnson, Aaron St. Clair, Shu-Ya Chen, Maja J. Matarić

Year
2010
Citations
35

Abstract

New approaches to rehabilitation and health care have developed due to advances in technology and human robot interaction (HRI). Socially assistive robotics (SAR) is a subcategory of HRI that focuses on providing assistance through hands-off interactions. We have developed a SAR architecture that facilitates multiple task-oriented interactions between a user and a robot agent. The architecture accommodates a variety of inputs, tasks, and interaction modalities that are used to provide relevant, real-time feedback to the participant. We have implemented the architecture and validated its technological feasibility in a small pilot study in which a SAR agent led three post-stroke individuals through an exercise scenario. In the following, we present our architecture design, and the results of the feasibility study.

Keywords

Task (project management)Human–computer interactionModalitiesArchitectureComputer scienceRobotHuman–robot interactionRehabilitation roboticsRoboticsVariety (cybernetics)

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