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Minimum jerk trajectory control for rehabilitation and haptic applications

Farshid Amirabdollahian, Rui Loureiro, William Harwin

Year
2003
Citations
98

Abstract

Smooth trajectories are essential for safe interaction in between human and a haptic interface. Different methods and strategies have been introduced to create such smooth trajectories. This paper studies the creation of human-like movements in haptic interfaces, based on the study of human arm motion. These motions are intended to retrain the upper limb movements of patients that lose manipulation functions following stroke. We present a model that uses higher degree polynomials to define a trajectory and control the robot arm to achieve minimum jerk movements. It also studies different methods that can be driven from polynomials to create more realistic human-like movements for therapeutic purposes.

Keywords

Haptic technologyJerkTrajectoryComputer scienceHuman armRobotMotion (physics)AccelerationControl theory (sociology)Simulation

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