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Title
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B-COV:Bio-inspired Virtual Interaction for 3D Articulated Robotic Arm for Post-stroke Rehabilitation during Pandemic of COVID-19
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Author
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Khalid Hamid Salman Allehaibi, Ahmad Hoirul Basori, and Nasser Nammas Albaqami
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Citation |
Vol. 21 No. 2 pp. 110-119
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Abstract
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The Coronavirus or COVID-19 is contagiousness virus that infected almost every single part of the world. This pandemic forced a major country did lockdown and stay at a home policy to reduce virus spread and the number of victims. Interactions between humans and robots form a popular subject of research worldwide. In medical robotics, the primary challenge is to implement natural interactions between robots and human users. Human communication consists of dynamic processes that involve joint attention and attracting each other. Coordinated care involves sharing among agents of behaviours, events, interests, and contexts in the world from time to time. The robotics arm is an expensive and complicated system because robot simulators are widely used instead of for rehabilitation purposes in medicine. Interaction in natural ways is necessary for disabled persons to work with the robot simulator. This article proposes a low-cost rehabilitation system by building an arm gesture tracking system based on a depth camera that can capture and interpret human gestures and use them as interactive commands for a robot simulator to perform specific tasks on the 3D block. The results show that the proposed system can help patients control the rotation and movement of the 3D arm using their hands. The pilot testing with healthy subjects yielded encouraging results. They could synchronize their actions with a 3D robotic arm to perform several repetitive tasks and exerting 19920 J of energy (kg.m2.S-2). The average of consumed energy mentioned before is in medium scale. Therefore, we relate this energy with rehabilitation performance as an initial stage and can be improved further with extra repetitive exercise to speed up the recovery process.
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Keywords
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bio-inspired interaction, robotics, medical, post-stroke rehabilitation, gesture tracking.
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URL
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http://paper.ijcsns.org/07_book/202102/20210213.pdf
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