Title :
Closed Loop Kinesthetic Feedback for Postural Control Rehabilitation
Author :
Verite, Fabien ; Bachta, Wael ; Morel, Guillaume
Author_Institution :
UPMC Univ. Paris 06, Paris, France
Abstract :
Postural control rehabilitation may benefit from the use of smart devices providing biofeedback. This approach consists of increasing the patients perception of their postural state. Namely, postural state is monitored and fed back in real time to the patients through one or more sensory channels. This allows implementing rehabilitation exercises where the patients control their posture with the help of additional sensory inputs. In this paper, a closed loop control of the Center-Of-Pressure (CoP) based on kinesthetic feedback is proposed as a new form of biofeedback. The motion of a one Degree of Freedom (DoF) translational device, lightly touched by the patient´s forefinger, is servoed to the patient´s CoP position extracted from the measurements of a force plate on which he/she stands. As a result, the patient´s CoP can be controllably displaced. A first set of experiments is used to prove the feasibility of this closed-loop control under ideal conditions favoring the perception of the kinesthetic feedback, while the subject is totally unaware of the context. A second set of experiments is then proposed to evaluate the robustness of this approach under experimental conditions that are more realistic with regards to the clinical context of a rehabilitation program involving biofeedback-based exercises.
Keywords :
closed loop systems; feedback; medical control systems; patient monitoring; patient rehabilitation; CoP; DoF translational device; biofeedback-based exercises; center-of-pressure; clinical context; closed loop control; closed loop kinesthetic feedback; force plate measurements; kinesthetic feedback perception; one degree of freedom translational device; patients perception; postural control rehabilitation; postural state monitoring; rehabilitation exercises; sensory channels; smart devices; Belts; Biological control systems; Context; Force; Haptic interfaces; Robot sensing systems; Servomotors; Balance training system; clinical rehabilitation training; kinesthetic devices; light touch; postural control; somatosensory feedback;
Journal_Title :
Haptics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TOH.2013.64