DocumentCode
3050330
Title
Impedance mismatch: Some differences between the way humans and robots control interaction forces
Author
Harwin, William S.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Cybern., Univ. of Reading, Reading, UK
fYear
2009
fDate
23-26 June 2009
Firstpage
19
Lastpage
19
Abstract
In over forty years of research robots have made very little progress still largely confined to industrial manufacture and cute toys, yet in the same period computing has followed Moores Law where the capacity double roughly every two years. So why is there no Moores Law for robots? Two areas stand out as worthy of research to speedup progress. The first is to get a greater understanding of how human and animal brains control movement, the second to build a new generation of robots that have greater haptic sense, that is a better ability to adapt to the environment as it is encountered. A remarkable property of the cognitive-motor system in humans and animals is that it is slow. Recognising an object may take 250 mS, a reaction time of 150 mS is considered fast. Yet despite this slow system we are well designed to allow contact with the world in a variety of ways. We can anticipate an encounter, use the change of force as a means of communication and ignore sensory cues when they are not relevant. A better understanding of these process has allowed us to build haptic interfaces to mimic the interaction. Emerging from this understanding are new ways to control the contact between robots, the user and the environment. Rehabilitation robotics has all the elements in the subject to not only enable and change the lives of people with disabilities, but also to facilitate revolution change in classic robotics.
Keywords
force control; haptic interfaces; human-robot interaction; medical robotics; patient rehabilitation; sensors; Moores Law; cognitive-motor system; haptic interfaces; haptic sense; impedance mismatch; rehabilitation robotics; robots; Animals; Haptic interfaces; Humans; Impedance; Moore´s Law; Rehabilitation robotics; Robot control; Robot sensing systems; Service robots; Toy manufacturing industry;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Rehabilitation Robotics, 2009. ICORR 2009. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Kyoto International Conference Center
ISSN
1945-7898
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3788-7
Electronic_ISBN
1945-7898
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICORR.2009.5209464
Filename
5209464
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