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Toward a practical mobile robotic aid system for people with severe physical disabilities

M.A. Regalbuto, Thomas A. Krouskop, J.B. Cheatham

Year
1992
Citations
20

Abstract

A simple, relatively inexpensive robotic system that can aid severely disabled persons by providing pick-and-place manipulative abilities to augment the functions of human or trained animal assistants is under development at Rice University and the Baylor College of Medicine. A stand-alone software application program runs on a Macintosh personal computer and provides the user with a selection of interactive windows for commanding the mobile robot via cursor action. A HERO 2000 robot has been modified such that its workspace extends from the floor to tabletop heights, and the robot is interfaced to a Macintosh SE via a wireless communications link for untethered operation. Integrated into the system are hardware and software which allow the user to control household appliances in addition to the robot. A separate Machine Control Interface device converts breath action and head or other three-dimensional motion inputs into cursor signals. Preliminary in-home and laboratory testing has demonstrated the utility of the system to perform useful navigational and manipulative tasks.

Keywords

WorkspaceComputer scienceHuman–computer interactionSoftwareRobotCursor (databases)Personal computerInterface (matter)Robotic armSimulation

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