ROJul 14, 2021

Sensorimotor-inspired Tactile Feedback and Control Improve Consistency of Prosthesis Manipulation in the Absence of Direct Vision

arXiv:2107.07000v1
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge for amputees who need to perform daily activities without constant visual attention, representing a domain-specific incremental improvement in upper-limb prosthetics.

The study tackled the problem of amputees relying on visual cues for prosthesis manipulation by developing a myoelectric prosthesis with tactile feedback and reflex control, resulting in more consistent high performance in a reach-to-pick-and-place task without direct vision compared to a standard prosthesis.

The lack of haptically aware upper-limb prostheses forces amputees to rely largely on visual cues to complete activities of daily living. In contrast, able-bodied individuals inherently rely on conscious haptic perception and automatic tactile reflexes to govern volitional actions in situations that do not allow for constant visual attention. We therefore propose a myoelectric prosthesis system that reflects these concepts to aid manipulation performance without direct vision. To implement this design, we built two fabric-based tactile sensors that measure contact location along the palmar and dorsal sides of the prosthetic fingers and grasp pressure at the tip of the prosthetic thumb. Inspired by the natural sensorimotor system, we use the measurements from these sensors to provide vibrotactile feedback of contact location and implement a tactile grasp controller that uses automatic reflexes to prevent over-grasping and object slip. We compare this system to a standard myoelectric prosthesis in a challenging reach-to-pick-and-place task conducted without direct vision; 17 able-bodied adults took part in this single-session between-subjects study. Participants in the tactile group achieved more consistent high performance compared to participants in the standard group. These results indicate that the addition of contact-location feedback and reflex control increases the consistency with which objects can be grasped and moved without direct vision in upper-limb prosthetics.

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