Title :
Development of a human-like neurologic model to simulate the influences of diseases for neurologic examination training
Author :
Chunbao Wang ; Noh, Y. ; Tokumoto, Mitsuhiro ; Terunaga, Chihara ; Yusuke, Matsuoka ; Ishii, Hiroyuki ; Sessa, S. ; Zecca, M. ; Takanishi, A. ; Hatake, Kazuyuki ; Shoji, Shuji
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Adv. Sci. & Eng., Waseda Univ., Tokyo, Japan
Abstract :
Neurologic examination procedures require not only abundant knowledge but also prominent skills. During medical education and training, several methods will be put to use such as watching video, reading books, making use of the simulated patient (SP), and so on. These can help medical staffs, especially novices, to master the skills and accumulate experiences. To make up for the drawbacks of the above methods, such as lack of active interactions, limitation of multi-symptom reproductions, etc, the medical training simulators have been developed to improve training effectiveness. However, most of these simulators only mimic the symptoms. They have no the abilities to show the pathology of diseases. This limits the training effectiveness. In this paper, we propose an elbow robot named WKE-1(Waseda Kyotokagaku Elbow Robot No.1) for neurologic examination training as one part of the whole body patient robot named WKP (Waseda Kyotokagaku Patient). In this robot, we simulate various symptoms occurring during the examination of elbow force, biceps tendon reflex, involuntary action, and also make a physiological neurological model to simulate the pathology of the nervous system. Taking advantage of this robot, the trainee can get a systematic training on both the skills and knowledge. Finally, we take a set of experiments to verify our proposed mechanism and system. The experimental results lead to the consideration that the approach is worth following in further research.
Keywords :
biomedical education; diseases; medical robotics; neurophysiology; SP; WKE-1; WKP; Waseda Kyotokagaku elbow robot no 1; Waseda Kyotokagaku patient; biceps tendon reflex; book reading; disease influences; disease pathology; elbow force; elbow robot; human-like neurologic model; involuntary action; medical education; medical staffs; medical training; medical training simulators; multisymptom reproductions; neurologic examination training; physiological neurological model; simulated patient; training effectiveness; video watching; Brain modeling; Diseases; Elbow; Force; Muscles; Robots; Training;
Conference_Titel :
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Karlsruhe
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-5641-1
DOI :
10.1109/ICRA.2013.6631265