Alina Glushkova

RO
3papers
16citations
Novelty38%
AI Score21

3 Papers

ROApr 3, 2023
Motion Capture Benchmark of Real Industrial Tasks and Traditional Crafts for Human Movement Analysis

Brenda Elizabeth Olivas-Padilla, Alina Glushkova, Sotiris Manitsaris

Human movement analysis is a key area of research in robotics, biomechanics, and data science. It encompasses tracking, posture estimation, and movement synthesis. While numerous methodologies have evolved over time, a systematic and quantitative evaluation of these approaches using verifiable ground truth data of three-dimensional human movement is still required to define the current state of the art. This paper presents seven datasets recorded using inertial-based motion capture. The datasets contain professional gestures carried out by industrial operators and skilled craftsmen performed in real conditions in-situ. The datasets were created with the intention of being used for research in human motion modeling, analysis, and generation. The protocols for data collection are described in detail, and a preliminary analysis of the collected data is provided as a benchmark. The Gesture Operational Model, a hybrid stochastic-biomechanical approach based on kinematic descriptors, is utilized to model the dynamics of the experts' movements and create mathematical representations of their motion trajectories for analysis and quantifying their body dexterity. The models allowed accurate the generation of human professional poses and an intuitive description of how body joints cooperate and change over time through the performance of the task.

ROMar 21, 2022
Computational ergonomics for task delegation in Human-Robot Collaboration: spatiotemporal adaptation of the robot to the human through contactless gesture recognition

Brenda Elizabeth Olivas-Padilla, Dimitris Papanagiotou, Gavriela Senteri et al.

The high prevalence of work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs) could be addressed by optimizing Human-Robot Collaboration (HRC) frameworks for manufacturing applications. In this context, this paper proposes two hypotheses for ergonomically effective task delegation and HRC. The first hypothesis states that it is possible to quantify ergonomically professional tasks using motion data from a reduced set of sensors. Then, the most dangerous tasks can be delegated to a collaborative robot. The second hypothesis is that by including gesture recognition and spatial adaptation, the ergonomics of an HRC scenario can be improved by avoiding needless motions that could expose operators to ergonomic risks and by lowering the physical effort required of operators. An HRC scenario for a television manufacturing process is optimized to test both hypotheses. For the ergonomic evaluation, motion primitives with known ergonomic risks were modeled for their detection in professional tasks and to estimate a risk score based on the European Assembly Worksheet (EAWS). A Deep Learning gesture recognition module trained with egocentric television assembly data was used to complement the collaboration between the human operator and the robot. Additionally, a skeleton-tracking algorithm provided the robot with information about the operator's pose, allowing it to spatially adapt its motion to the operator's anthropometrics. Three experiments were conducted to determine the effect of gesture recognition and spatial adaptation on the operator's range of motion. The rate of spatial adaptation was used as a key performance indicator (KPI), and a new KPI for measuring the reduction in the operator's motion is presented in this paper.

CVApr 13, 2023
Deep state-space modeling for explainable representation, analysis, and generation of professional human poses

Brenda Elizabeth Olivas-Padilla, Alina Glushkova, Sotiris Manitsaris

The analysis of human movements has been extensively studied due to its wide variety of practical applications, such as human-robot interaction, human learning applications, or clinical diagnosis. Nevertheless, the state-of-the-art still faces scientific challenges when modeling human movements. To begin, new models must account for the stochasticity of human movement and the physical structure of the human body in order to accurately predict the evolution of full-body motion descriptors over time. Second, while utilizing deep learning algorithms, their explainability in terms of body posture predictions needs to be improved as they lack comprehensible representations of human movement. This paper addresses these challenges by introducing three novel methods for creating explainable representations of human movement. In this study, human body movement is formulated as a state-space model adhering to the structure of the Gesture Operational Model (GOM), whose parameters are estimated through the application of deep learning and statistical algorithms. The trained models are used for the full-body dexterity analysis of expert professionals, in which dynamic associations between body joints are identified, and for generating artificially professional movements.