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Measuring the dynamic impedance of the human arm without a force sensor

Matthew Dyck, Mahdi Tavakoli

Year
2013
Citations
35

Abstract

Rehabilitation robots may be used to accurately measure the mechanical impedance of the human arm in order to quantitatively assess the motor function of a patient undergoing neurorehabilitation therapy. However, the high cost of these robotic systems and their required sensors has posed a barrier to widespread clinical use. We present a technique to measure the mechanical impedance of the human arm without the need for a physical force sensor to measure human-robot interaction forces. Instead, these forces are accurately estimated by a virtual sensor that incorporates the robot's kinematics and dynamics, along with acceleration measurements from an inexpensive accelerometer. The identification techniques are validated on a mass-spring system of known impedance and are subsequently applied to data collected from the human arm.

Keywords

AccelerometerKinematicsNeurorehabilitationAccelerationComputer scienceRobotMeasure (data warehouse)Mechanical impedanceRobotic armElectrical impedance

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