Elif Hocaoglu

2papers

2 Papers

ROSep 27, 2021
A 3-DoF Robotic Platform for the Rehabilitation and Assessment of Reaction Time and Balance Skills of MS Patients

Tugce Ersoy, Elif Hocaoglu

The central nervous system exploits anticipatory (APAs) and compensatory (CPAs) postural adjustments to maintain the balance.The postural adjustments comprising stability of the center of mass (CoM) and the pressure distribution of the body influence each other if there is a lack of performance in either of them.Any predictable or sudden perturbation may pave the way for the divergence of CoM from equilibrium and inhomogeneous pressure distribution of the body.Such a situation is often observed in the daily lives of MS patients due to their poor APAs and CPAs and induces their falls.The way of minimizing the risk of falls in neurological patients is by utilizing perturbation-based rehabilitation, as it is efficient in the recovery of the balance disorder. In light of the findings, we present the design, implementation, and experimental evaluation of a novel 3 DoF parallel manipulator to treat the balance disorder of MS.The robotic platform allows angular motion of the ankle based on its anthropomorphic freedom.Moreover, the end-effector endowed with upper and lower platforms is designed to evaluate both the pressure distribution of each foot and the CoM of the body, respectively.Data gathered from the platforms are utilized to both evaluate the performance of the patients and used in high-level control of the robotic platform to regulate the difficulty level of tasks. In the study, kinematic and dynamic analyses of the robot are derived and validated in the simulation environment.Low-level control of the first prototype is also successfully implemented via the PID controller.The capacity of each platform is evaluated with a set of experiments considering the assessment of pressure distribution and CoM of the foot-like objects on the end-effector.The experimental results indicate that such a system well-address the need for balance skill training and assessment through the APAs and CPAs.

SYOct 28, 2019
Design, Implementation and Evaluation of a Variable Stiffness Transradial Hand Prosthesis

Elif Hocaoglu, Volkan Patoglu

We present the design, implementation, and experimental evaluation of a low-cost, customizable, easy-to-use transradial hand prosthesis capable of adapting its compliance. Variable stiffness actuation (VSA) of the prosthesis is based on antagonistically arranged tendons coupled to nonlinear springs driven through a Bowden cable-based power transmission. Bowden cable-based antagonistic VSA can, not only regulate the stiffness and the position of the prosthetic hand, but also enables a light-weight and low-cost design, by opportunistic placement of motors, batteries and controllers on any convenient location on the human body, while nonlinear springs are conveniently integrated inside the forearm. The transradial hand prosthesis also features tendon driven underactuated compliant fingers that allow natural adaption of the hand shape to wrap around a wide variety of object geometries, while the modulation of the stiffness of their drive tendons enables the prosthesis to perform various tasks with high dexterity. The compliant fingers of the prosthesis add inherent robustness and flexibility, even under impacts. The control of the variable stiffness transradial hand prosthesis is achieved by an sEMG based natural human-machine interface.