517 research outputs found

    Soft Gloves: A Review on Recent Developments in Actuation, Sensing, Control and Applications

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    Interest in soft gloves, both robotic and haptic, has enormously grown over the past decade, due to their inherent compliance, which makes them particularly suitable for direct interaction with the human hand. Robotic soft gloves have been developed for hand rehabilitation, for ADLs assistance, or sometimes for both. Haptic soft gloves may be applied in virtual reality (VR) applications or to give sensory feedback in combination with prostheses or to control robots. This paper presents an updated review of the state of the art of soft gloves, with a particular focus on actuation, sensing, and control, combined with a detailed analysis of the devices according to their application field. The review is organized on two levels: a prospective review allows the highlighting of the main trends in soft gloves development and applications, and an analytical review performs an in-depth analysis of the technical solutions developed and implemented in the revised scientific research. Additional minor evaluations integrate the analysis, such as a synthetic investigation of the main results in the clinical studies and trials referred in literature which involve soft gloves

    Development of Low Cost Supernumerary Robotic Fingers as an Assistive Device

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    This paper presents the development of new type of wearable robot namely Supernumerary Robotic Finger (SRF) as  an  assistive   robot  for  healthy  people  or  people   with hemiparesis or hemiplegia. SRF comprises of two manipulators attached  in user’s wrist. Three flex sensors are utilized to measure the finger bending of the user’s finger. The posture of SRF is driven by modified glove sensor. The kinematics of both robotic thumb (RT) and robotic finger (RF) is studied using D-H parameter method and RoboAnalyzer software in order to understand the kinematic behavior of this robot. Each of RT and RF has three degrees of freedom (DOF). The posture of RT and RF is controlled using bending angles of thumb and finger from the user that are read by flex sensor. Based on the experimental results for people with healthy hand, the proposed SRF can assist object manipulation task in grasping, holding, and manipulating an object by using single hand when normally it only can be done by using two hands. From the experimental results on a person with healthy hand, the proposed of SRF can be employed as an assistive device for people with hemiparesis or hemiplegia. This device will enable people with diminished hand function work more independently

    Wearable haptic systems for the fingertip and the hand: taxonomy, review and perspectives

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    In the last decade, we have witnessed a drastic change in the form factor of audio and vision technologies, from heavy and grounded machines to lightweight devices that naturally fit our bodies. However, only recently, haptic systems have started to be designed with wearability in mind. The wearability of haptic systems enables novel forms of communication, cooperation, and integration between humans and machines. Wearable haptic interfaces are capable of communicating with the human wearers during their interaction with the environment they share, in a natural and yet private way. This paper presents a taxonomy and review of wearable haptic systems for the fingertip and the hand, focusing on those systems directly addressing wearability challenges. The paper also discusses the main technological and design challenges for the development of wearable haptic interfaces, and it reports on the future perspectives of the field. Finally, the paper includes two tables summarizing the characteristics and features of the most representative wearable haptic systems for the fingertip and the hand

    인간 기계 상호작용을 위한 강건하고 정확한 손동작 추적 기술 연구

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    학위논문(박사) -- 서울대학교대학원 : 공과대학 기계항공공학부, 2021.8. 이동준.Hand-based interface is promising for realizing intuitive, natural and accurate human machine interaction (HMI), as the human hand is main source of dexterity in our daily activities. For this, the thesis begins with the human perception study on the detection threshold of visuo-proprioceptive conflict (i.e., allowable tracking error) with or without cutantoues haptic feedback, and suggests tracking error specification for realistic and fluidic hand-based HMI. The thesis then proceeds to propose a novel wearable hand tracking module, which, to be compatible with the cutaneous haptic devices spewing magnetic noise, opportunistically employ heterogeneous sensors (IMU/compass module and soft sensor) reflecting the anatomical properties of human hand, which is suitable for specific application (i.e., finger-based interaction with finger-tip haptic devices). This hand tracking module however loses its tracking when interacting with, or being nearby, electrical machines or ferromagnetic materials. For this, the thesis presents its main contribution, a novel visual-inertial skeleton tracking (VIST) framework, that can provide accurate and robust hand (and finger) motion tracking even for many challenging real-world scenarios and environments, for which the state-of-the-art technologies are known to fail due to their respective fundamental limitations (e.g., severe occlusions for tracking purely with vision sensors; electromagnetic interference for tracking purely with IMUs (inertial measurement units) and compasses; and mechanical contacts for tracking purely with soft sensors). The proposed VIST framework comprises a sensor glove with multiple IMUs and passive visual markers as well as a head-mounted stereo camera; and a tightly-coupled filtering-based visual-inertial fusion algorithm to estimate the hand/finger motion and auto-calibrate hand/glove-related kinematic parameters simultaneously while taking into account the hand anatomical constraints. The VIST framework exhibits good tracking accuracy and robustness, affordable material cost, light hardware and software weights, and ruggedness/durability even to permit washing. Quantitative and qualitative experiments are also performed to validate the advantages and properties of our VIST framework, thereby, clearly demonstrating its potential for real-world applications.손 동작을 기반으로 한 인터페이스는 인간-기계 상호작용 분야에서 직관성, 몰입감, 정교함을 제공해줄 수 있어 많은 주목을 받고 있고, 이를 위해 가장 필수적인 기술 중 하나가 손 동작의 강건하고 정확한 추적 기술 이다. 이를 위해 본 학위논문에서는 먼저 사람 인지의 관점에서 손 동작 추적 오차의 인지 범위를 규명한다. 이 오차 인지 범위는 새로운 손 동작 추적 기술 개발 시 중요한 설계 기준이 될 수 있어 이를 피험자 실험을 통해 정량적으로 밝히고, 특히 손끝 촉각 장비가 있을때 이 인지 범위의 변화도 밝힌다. 이를 토대로, 촉각 피드백을 주는 것이 다양한 인간-기계 상호작용 분야에서 널리 연구되어 왔으므로, 먼저 손끝 촉각 장비와 함께 사용할 수 있는 손 동작 추적 모듈을 개발한다. 이 손끝 촉각 장비는 자기장 외란을 일으켜 착용형 기술에서 흔히 사용되는 지자기 센서를 교란하는데, 이를 적절한 사람 손의 해부학적 특성과 관성 센서/지자기 센서/소프트 센서의 적절한 활용을 통해 해결한다. 이를 확장하여 본 논문에서는, 촉각 장비 착용 시 뿐 아니라 모든 장비 착용 / 환경 / 물체와의 상호작용 시에도 사용 가능한 새로운 손 동작 추적 기술을 제안한다. 기존의 손 동작 추적 기술들은 가림 현상 (영상 기반 기술), 지자기 외란 (관성/지자기 센서 기반 기술), 물체와의 접촉 (소프트 센서 기반 기술) 등으로 인해 제한된 환경에서 밖에 사용하지 못한다. 이를 위해 많은 문제를 일으키는 지자기 센서 없이 상보적인 특성을 지니는 관성 센서와 영상 센서를 융합하고, 이때 작은 공간에 다 자유도의 움직임을 갖는 손 동작을 추적하기 위해 다수의 구분되지 않는 마커들을 사용한다. 이 마커의 구분 과정 (correspondence search)를 위해 기존의 약결합 (loosely-coupled) 기반이 아닌 강결합 (tightly-coupled 기반 센서 융합 기술을 제안하고, 이를 통해 지자기 센서 없이 정확한 손 동작이 가능할 뿐 아니라 착용형 센서들의 정확성/편의성에 문제를 일으키던 센서 부착 오차 / 사용자의 손 모양 등을 자동으로 정확히 보정한다. 이 제안된 영상-관성 센서 융합 기술 (Visual-Inertial Skeleton Tracking (VIST)) 의 뛰어난 성능과 강건성이 다양한 정량/정성 실험을 통해 검증되었고, 이는 VIST의 다양한 일상환경에서 기존 시스템이 구현하지 못하던 손 동작 추적을 가능케 함으로써, 많은 인간-기계 상호작용 분야에서의 가능성을 보여준다.1 Introduction 1 1.1. Motivation 1 1.2. Related Work 5 1.3. Contribution 12 2 Detection Threshold of Hand Tracking Error 16 2.1. Motivation 16 2.2. Experimental Environment 20 2.2.1. Hardware Setup 21 2.2.2. Virtual Environment Rendering 23 2.2.3. HMD Calibration 23 2.3. Identifying the Detection Threshold of Tracking Error 26 2.3.1. Experimental Setup 27 2.3.2. Procedure 27 2.3.3. Experimental Result 31 2.4. Enlarging the Detection Threshold of Tracking Error by Haptic Feedback 31 2.4.1. Experimental Setup 31 2.4.2. Procedure 32 2.4.3. Experimental Result 34 2.5. Discussion 34 3 Wearable Finger Tracking Module for Haptic Interaction 38 3.1. Motivation 38 3.2. Development of Finger Tracking Module 42 3.2.1. Hardware Setup 42 3.2.2. Tracking algorithm 45 3.2.3. Calibration method 48 3.3. Evaluation for VR Haptic Interaction Task 50 3.3.1. Quantitative evaluation of FTM 50 3.3.2. Implementation of Wearable Cutaneous Haptic Interface 51 3.3.3. Usability evaluation for VR peg-in-hole task 53 3.4. Discussion 57 4 Visual-Inertial Skeleton Tracking for Human Hand 59 4.1. Motivation 59 4.2. Hardware Setup and Hand Models 62 4.2.1. Human Hand Model 62 4.2.2. Wearable Sensor Glove 62 4.2.3. Stereo Camera 66 4.3. Visual Information Extraction 66 4.3.1. Marker Detection in Raw Images 68 4.3.2. Cost Function for Point Matching 68 4.3.3. Left-Right Stereo Matching 69 4.4. IMU-Aided Correspondence Search 72 4.5. Filtering-based Visual-Inertial Sensor Fusion 76 4.5.1. EKF States for Hand Tracking and Auto-Calibration 78 4.5.2. Prediction with IMU Information 79 4.5.3. Correction with Visual Information 82 4.5.4. Correction with Anatomical Constraints 84 4.6. Quantitative Evaluation for Free Hand Motion 87 4.6.1. Experimental Setup 87 4.6.2. Procedure 88 4.6.3. Experimental Result 90 4.7. Quantitative and Comparative Evaluation for Challenging Hand Motion 95 4.7.1. Experimental Setup 95 4.7.2. Procedure 96 4.7.3. Experimental Result 98 4.7.4. Performance Comparison with Existing Methods for Challenging Hand Motion 101 4.8. Qualitative Evaluation for Real-World Scenarios 105 4.8.1. Visually Complex Background 105 4.8.2. Object Interaction 106 4.8.3. Wearing Fingertip Cutaneous Haptic Devices 109 4.8.4. Outdoor Environment 111 4.9. Discussion 112 5 Conclusion 116 References 124 Abstract (in Korean) 139 Acknowledgment 141박

    The role of morphology of the thumb in anthropomorphic grasping : a review

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    The unique musculoskeletal structure of the human hand brings in wider dexterous capabilities to grasp and manipulate a repertoire of objects than the non-human primates. It has been widely accepted that the orientation and the position of the thumb plays an important role in this characteristic behavior. There have been numerous attempts to develop anthropomorphic robotic hands with varying levels of success. Nevertheless, manipulation ability in those hands is to be ameliorated even though they can grasp objects successfully. An appropriate model of the thumb is important to manipulate the objects against the fingers and to maintain the stability. Modeling these complex interactions about the mechanical axes of the joints and how to incorporate these joints in robotic thumbs is a challenging task. This article presents a review of the biomechanics of the human thumb and the robotic thumb designs to identify opportunities for future anthropomorphic robotic hands

    HERO Glove

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    Non-repetitive manipulation tasks that are easy for humans to perform are difficult for autonomous robots to execute. The Haptic Exoskeletal Robot Operator (HERO) Glove is a system designed for users to remotely control robot manipulators whilst providing sensory feedback to the user. This realistic haptic feedback is achieved through the use of toroidal air-filled actuators that stiffen up around the user’s fingers. Tactile sensor data is sent from the robot to the HERO Glove, where it is used to vary the pressure in the toroidal actuators to simulate the sense of touch. Curvature sensors and inertial measurement units are used to capture the glove’s pose to control the robot

    DandelionTouch: High Fidelity Haptic Rendering of Soft Objects in VR by a Swarm of Drones

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    To achieve high fidelity haptic rendering of soft objects in a high mobility virtual environment, we propose a novel haptic display DandelionTouch. The tactile actuators are delivered to the fingertips of the user by a swarm of drones. Users of DandelionTouch are capable of experiencing tactile feedback in a large space that is not limited by the device's working area. Importantly, they will not experience muscle fatigue during long interactions with virtual objects. Hand tracking and swarm control algorithm allow guiding the swarm with hand motions and avoid collisions inside the formation. Several topologies of the impedance connection between swarm units were investigated in this research. The experiment, in which drones performed a point following task on a square trajectory in real-time, revealed that drones connected in a Star topology performed the trajectory with low mean positional error (RMSE decreased by 20.6% in comparison with other impedance topologies and by 40.9% in comparison with potential field-based swarm control). The achieved velocities of the drones in all formations with impedance behavior were 28% higher than for the swarm controlled with the potential field algorithm. Additionally, the perception of several vibrotactile patterns was evaluated in a user study with 7 participants. The study has shown that the proposed combination of temporal delay and frequency modulation allows users to successfully recognize the surface property and motion direction in VR simultaneously (mean recognition rate of 70%, maximum of 93%). DandelionTouch suggests a new type of haptic feedback in VR systems where no hand-held or wearable interface is required.Comment: Accepted to the 2022 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC). Copyright 20XX IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitte
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