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Electronic Skin as Human–Robot Interface for Human Grasp Recognition in Home-Care Robots: Introducing a Complete Set of Resources

September 16, 2024 by Shumi Zhao, Jin Huang, Mengchu Zhou, Zhijun Li, Haisheng Xia, Cheng Chen, Jianwei Liu, Mingming Ma, Fujiang Lin

Population aging has highlighted the significance of developing home-care robots to assist human life. However, traditional home-care robots work according to fixed procedures, which lack human–robot interaction to mimic human hand action. Human–robot interfaces provide an opportunity for interactions between robots and users, which play an important role in home-care robots. Traditional human–robot interfaces are based on rigid, cumbersome, and high-priced machines, which prevent their wide application in performing home-care tasks. An e-skin sensor with 11 stretchable resistors evenly distributed on the back of the human hand, which could be applied to monitor human finger motion and control robotic fingers to dexterously grasp diverse objects, is presented in this article. A 3D printer is employed to pattern high-performance wires into structurally soft and stretchable filamentary serpentines. The stretchable resistors are fabricated by a thin sensing film of mixed multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) and silicone elastomer. The e-skin sensor is applied in a hand-in-the-loop system for controlling a robotic hand to help grasp an object synchronously. A robot system is developed to connect the e-skin with the robotic hand to perform grasp actions with a success rate of more than 80%. By analyzing the experimental results of the e-skin sensor and robotic hand grasp, this work obtains insights showing that the skin sensor can help engineers design a home-care assistant plan for patients according to monitoring value or a human–robot interaction mode by robotic fingers mimicking human finger actions.

For more about this article see link below.

https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10144796

For the open access PDF link of this article please click here.

Filed Under: Past Features Tagged With: Assisted living, Control systems, Elastomers, Flexible electronics, Grasping, Haptic interfaces, Human-robot interaction, Monitoring, Older adults, Robot sensing systems, Service robots, Skin, Three-dimensional displays, Three-dimensional printing

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IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine (RAM) has over 14,000 readers who are the people who drive this remarkable technology. More than half work in basic research and many of the others are top level engineers and decision-makers in industry.  This magazine highlights new concepts in Robotics and Automation that are applied to real-world systems. It delivers tutorial and survey papers by distinguished experts in the field, organizes focused special issues on hot topics, and provides a forum for disseminating and discussing emerging trends, novel achievements, and selected news relevant to the development of the whole community active in these fields worldwide.

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IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine  publishes four issues per year: March, June, September and December.