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The
Human Arm Kinematics and Dynamics During Daily Activities –
Toward a 7 DOF Upper Limb Powered Exoskeleton
Abstract
Integrating
human and robot into a single system offers remarkable opportunities
for creating a new generation of assistive technology. Having
obvious applications in rehabilitation medicine and virtual reality
simulation, such a device would benefit both the healthy and disabled
population. The aim of the research is to study the kinematics
and the
dynamics of the human arm during daily activities in a free and
unconstrained environment as part of an on-going research involved
in the design of a 7 degree of freedom (DOF) powered exoskeleton
for the upper limb. The kinematics of the upper limb was acquired
with a motion capture system while performing a wide verity of
daily activities. Utilizing a model of the human as a 7 DOF system,
the equations of motion were used to calculate joint torques given
the arm kinematics. During positioning tasks, higher angular velocities
were observed in the gross manipulation joints (the shoulder and
elbow) as compared to the
fine manipulation joints (the wrist). An inverted phenomenon was
observed during fine manipulation in which the angular velocities
of the wrist joint exceeded the angular velocities of the shoulder
and elbow joints. Analyzing the contribution of individual terms
of the arm’s equations of motion indicate that the gravitational
term is the most dominant term in these equations. The magnitudes
of this term across the joints and the various actions is higher
than the inertial, centrifugal, and Coriolis terms combined. Variation
in object grasping (e.g. power grasp of a spoon) alters the overall
arm kinematics in which other joints, such as the shoulder joint,
compensate for lost dexterity of the wrist. The collected database
along with the kinematics and dynamic analysis may provide the
fundamental understanding for designing powered exoskeleton for
the human arm.

Figure
- The Kinematics of the arm - A subject with reflected markers
performing daily activities. The kinematics of the arm is recorded
with a motion capturing system (Vicon)
Device
Exoskeleton
Prototype 3
Publications
(*) (*)
Note: Most of the BRL
publications are available on-line in a PDF format.
You may used the publication's reference number as a link to the
individual manuscript.
Rosen
J,, J. C. Perry, N. Manning, S. Burns, B. Hannaford, The Human
Arm Kinematics and Dynamics During Daily Activities – Toward
a 7 DOF Upper Limb Powered Exoskeleton, - ICAR 2005 – Seattle
WA, July 2005. [CP19
- BRL]
Perry
J.C., J. Rosen, Design of a 7 Degree-of-Freedom Upper-Limb Powered
Exoskeleton Proceedings of the 2006 BioRob Conference, Pisa, Italy,
February, 2006. [CP24
- BRL]
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