DocumentCode :
487949
Title :
On the Control and Stability of Robots Worn by Human: Experiments
Author :
Kazerooni, H. ; Hessburg, T.M.
Author_Institution :
Mechanical Engineering Department, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455
fYear :
1989
fDate :
21-23 June 1989
Firstpage :
1925
Lastpage :
1931
Abstract :
The work presented here is focused on the issues related to the dynamics and control in human/machine interaction in the sense of transfer of power and information signals. The extender is defined as an active manipulator worn by a human to increase the "strength" of the human wearing it (Part I). The human body, in physical contact with the extender, exchanges information signals and power with the extender. The dynamic model of the extender system consists of three main parts: the human arm, the extender, and the environment. A single-degree-of-freedom hydraulic extender has been designed and built for experimental verification of the stability and performance criteria. The trade-off between the performance and stability is discussed where we show that the more performance (larger force amplification) required, the narrower the stability range will be.
Keywords :
Actuators; Biological system modeling; Force feedback; Force measurement; Human robot interaction; Manipulator dynamics; Robot sensing systems; Stability; Torque; Velocity control;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference, 1989
Conference_Location :
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Type :
conf
Filename :
4790507
Link To Document :
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