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Multiarticulate bionic arms are now capable of mimicking the endogenous movements of the human hand. 3D-printing has reduced the cost of prosthetic hands themselves, but there is currently no low-cost alternative to dexterous electromyographic (EMG) control systems. To address this need, we developed an inexpensive (~$675) and portable EMG control system by integrating low-cost microcontrollers with an EMG acquisition device. We validated signal acquisition by comparing the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of our system with that of a high-end research-grade system. We also demonstrate the ability to use the low-cost control system for proportional and independent control of various prosthetic hands in real-time. We found that the SNR of the low-cost control system was statistically no worse than 44% of the SNR of a research-grade control system. The RMSEs of predicted hand movements (from a modified Kalman filter) were typically a few percent better than, and not more than 6% worse than, RMSEs of a research-grade system for up to six degrees of freedom when only relatively few (six) EMG electrodes were used. However, RMSEs were generally higher than RMSEs of research-grade systems that utilize considerably more (32) EMG electrodes, guiding future work towards increasing electrode count. Successful instantiation of this low-cost control system constitutes an important step towards the commercialization and wide-spread availability of dexterous bionic hands.
Bypass sockets allow researchers to perform tests of prosthetic systems from the prosthetic users perspective. We designed a modular upper-limb bypass socket with 3D-printed components that can be easily modified for use with a variety of terminal de
Intuitive control of prostheses relies on training algorithms to correlate biological recordings to motor intent. The quality of the training dataset is critical to run-time performance, but it is difficult to label hand kinematics accurately after t
The dexterity of conventional myoelectric prostheses is limited in part by the small datasets used to train the control algorithms. Variations in surface electrode positioning make it difficult to collect consistent data and to estimate motor intent
On the base of the developed master-slave prosthetic hand-arm robot system, which is controlled mainly based on signals obtained from bending sensors fixed on the data glove, the first idea deduced was to develop and add a multi-dimensional filter in
Deploying robots from isolated operations to shared environments has been an increasing trend in robotics for the last decades. However, the requirement of robust interaction in highly variable environments is still beyond the capability of most robo