Wheelchair collaborative control for disabled users navigating indoors
Visualitza/Obre
Urdiales.pdf (3,767Mb) (Accés restringit)
Sol·licita una còpia a l'autor
Què és aquest botó?
Aquest botó permet demanar una còpia d'un document restringit a l'autor. Es mostra quan:
- Disposem del correu electrònic de l'autor
- El document té una mida inferior a 20 Mb
- Es tracta d'un document d'accés restringit per decisió de l'autor o d'un document d'accés restringit per política de l'editorial
10.1016/j.artmed.2011.05.002
Inclou dades d'ús des de 2022
Cita com:
hdl:2117/12907
Tipus de documentArticle
Data publicació2011-07-08
Condicions d'accésAccés restringit per política de l'editorial
Tots els drets reservats. Aquesta obra està protegida pels drets de propietat intel·lectual i
industrial corresponents. Sense perjudici de les exempcions legals existents, queda prohibida la seva
reproducció, distribució, comunicació pública o transformació sense l'autorització del titular dels drets
Abstract
Objective: Mobility is of key importance for autonomous living. Persons with severe disabilities may be assisted by robotic wheelchairs when manual control is not possible. However, these persons should contribute to control as much as they can to avoid loss of residual skills and frustration. Traditionally, wheelchair shared control approaches either give control to person or robot depending on the situation.
Methods and materials: We propose a new shared control technique where robot and person contribute simultaneously to control. Their commands are weighted according to their respective local efficiencies and then combined via a reactive navigation strategy. Thus, assistance adapts to the user’s needs. We refer to this approach as collaborative control.
Results: Collaborative control was tested in a home environment in Fondazione Santa Lucia (Rome) by 18 volunteers presenting different degrees of physical and cognitive disability. All of them successfully finished a complex test path with assistance. Both users and caregivers’ opinion on the system was very positive. Acceptance was very good according to the psychosocial impact of assistive devices scale.
Conclusions: Collaborative control adapts to the person’s needs and assists him/her when necessary, locally compensating any problem related to specific disabilities. An ANOVA returned a p-value of 0.016, meaning that there is significant improvement in task performance when collaborative control is used.
CitacióUrdiales, C. [et al.]. Wheelchair collaborative control for disabled users navigating indoors. "Artificial intelligence in medicine", 08 Juliol 2011, vol. 52, núm. 3, p. 177-191.
ISSN0933-3657
Fitxers | Descripció | Mida | Format | Visualitza |
---|---|---|---|---|
Urdiales.pdf | 3,767Mb | Accés restringit |