Author:
Abd Moaed A.,Ingicco Joseph,Hutchinson Douglas T.,Tognoli Emmanuelle,Engeberg Erik D.
Abstract
AbstractLoss of tactile sensations is a major roadblock preventing upper limb-absent people from multitasking or using the full dexterity of their prosthetic hands. With current myoelectric prosthetic hands, limb-absent people can only control one grasp function at a time even though modern artificial hands are mechanically capable of individual control of all five digits. In this paper, we investigated whether people could precisely control the grip forces applied to two different objects grasped simultaneously with a dexterous artificial hand. Toward that end, we developed a novel multichannel wearable soft robotic armband to convey artificial sensations of touch to the robotic hand users. Multiple channels of haptic feedback enabled subjects to successfully grasp and transport two objects simultaneously with the dexterous artificial hand without breaking or dropping them, even when their vision of both objects was obstructed. Simultaneous transport of the objects provided a significant time savings to perform the deliveries in comparison to a one-at-a-time approach. This paper demonstrated that subjects were able to integrate multiple channels of haptic feedback into their motor control strategies to perform a complex simultaneous object grasp control task with an artificial limb, which could serve as a paradigm shift in the way prosthetic hands are operated.
Funder
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
National Institute of Aging
Seed grants from Florida Atlantic University’s Brain Institute, I-SENSE and College of Engineering and Computer Science
Department of Energy
Burroughs Wellcome Fund
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
23 articles.
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