A greedy assist-as-needed controller for end-effect upper limb rehabilitation robot based on 3-DOF potential field constraints

It has been proven that robot-assisted rehabilitation training can effectively promote the recovery of upper-limb motor function in post-stroke patients. Increasing patients' active participation by providing assist-as-needed (AAN) control strategies is key to the effectiveness of robot-assiste...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in robotics and AI 2024-10, Vol.11, p.1404814
Hauptverfasser: Lu, Yue, Lin, Zixuan, Li, Yahui, Lv, Jinwang, Zhang, Jiaji, Xiao, Cong, Liang, Ye, Chen, Xujiao, Song, Tao, Chai, Guohong, Zuo, Guokun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It has been proven that robot-assisted rehabilitation training can effectively promote the recovery of upper-limb motor function in post-stroke patients. Increasing patients' active participation by providing assist-as-needed (AAN) control strategies is key to the effectiveness of robot-assisted rehabilitation training. In this paper, a greedy assist-as-needed (GAAN) controller based on radial basis function (RBF) network combined with 3 degrees of freedom (3-DOF) potential constraints was proposed to provide AAN interactive forces of an end-effect upper limb rehabilitation robot. The proposed 3-DOF potential fields were adopted to constrain the tangential motions of three kinds of typical target trajectories (one-dimensional (1D) lines, two-dimensional (2D) curves and three-dimensional (3D) spirals) while the GAAN controller was designed to estimate the motor capability of a subject and provide appropriate robot-assisted forces. The co-simulation (Adams-Matlab/Simulink) experiments and behavioral experiments on 10 healthy volunteers were conducted to validate the utility of the GAAN controller. The experimental results demonstrated that the GAAN controller combined with 3-DOF potential field constraints enabled the subjects to actively participate in kinds of tracking tasks while keeping acceptable tracking accuracies. 3D spirals could be better in stimulating subjects' active participation when compared to 1D and 2D target trajectories. The current GAAN controller has the potential to be applied to existing commercial upper limb rehabilitation robots.
ISSN:2296-9144
2296-9144
DOI:10.3389/frobt.2024.1404814