Institut de Neurosciences Cognitives et Intégratives d'Aquitaine (UMR5287)

Aquitaine Institute for Cognitive and Integrative Neuroscience



INCIA - UMR 5287- CNRS
Université de Bordeaux

Zone nord Bat 2 2ème étage
146, rue Léo Saignat
33076 Bordeaux cedex
France

Téléphone 05.57.57.15.51
Télécopie 05.56.90.14.21

Supervisory authorities

CNRS Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes Université de Bordeaux

Our partners

Neurocampus Unitéde Formation de Biologie

GDR

GDR Robotique GDR Mémoire GDR Multi-électrodes

Search




Home > News

Biological Plausibility of Arm Postures Influences the Controllability of Robotic Arm Teleoperation.

by Loïc Grattier - published on , updated on

 Biological Plausibility of Arm Postures Influences the Controllability of Robotic Arm Teleoperation.

Biological Plausibility of Arm Postures Influences the Controllability of Robotic Arm Teleoperation
Mick, Badets, Oudeyer, Cattaert, de Rugy, Human Factors (2020)

We investigated how participants controlling a humanoid robotic arm’s 3D endpoint position by moving their own hand are influenced by the robot’s postures. Kinematic redundancy, whereby different arm postures achieve the same goal, is such that a robotic arm or prosthesis could theoretically be controlled with less signals than constitutive joints. However, congruency between a robot’s motion and our own is known to interfere with movement production. Hence, we expect the human-likeness of a robotic arm’s postures during endpoint teleoperation to influence controllability. Twenty-two able-bodied participants performed a target-reaching task with a robotic arm whose endpoint’s 3D position was controlled by moving their own hand. They completed a two-condition experiment corresponding to the robot displaying either biologically plausible or implausible postures. Upon initial practice in the experiment’s first part, endpoint trajectories were faster and shorter when the robot displayed human-like postures. However, these effects did not persist in the second part, where performance with implausible postures appeared to have benefited from initial practice with plausible ones. This suggests that the human-likeness of a robot’s postures is more critical for control in this initial period. These findings provide insight for the design of robotic arm teleoperation and prosthesis control schemes, in order to favor better familiarization and control from their users.

People involved in the laboratory : Sébastien Mick, Aymar de Rugy, Arnaud Badets, Daniel Cattaert