4.2 Article

Human motion quality and accuracy measuring method for human-robot physical interactions

Journal

INTELLIGENT SERVICE ROBOTICS
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 503-512

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11370-022-00432-8

Keywords

Motion capture; Human-robot collaboration; Human motion; Motion evaluation; Smart workplace; Jitters; Light-house system; IMU; Virtual reality

Categories

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany [01IS18060AH]
  3. European RegionalDevelopment Fund (EFRE) within the project SMAPS [0200545]

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This article introduces a novel approach for measuring human motion quality and accuracy in human-robot collaboration. The study conducted in a laboratory environment showed that the deviation of human wrist motion from the robot's baseline motion can be up to 3 cm in 40 cycle operations. This method helps to understand the quality of human motion behaviors and can be applied to various applications involving human-robot shared workplaces.
In human-robot collaboration (HRC), human motion capture can be considered an enabler for switching autonomy between humans and robots to create efficient and safe operations. For this purpose, wearable motion tracking systems such as IMU and lighthouse-based systems have been used to transfer human joint motions into robot controller models. Due to reasons such as global positioning, drift, and occlusion, in some situations, e.g., HRC, both systems have been combined. However, it is still not clear if the motion quality (e.g., smoothness, naturalness, and spatial accuracy) is sufficient when the human operator is in the loop. This article presents a novel approach for measuring human motion quality and accuracy in HRC. The human motion capture has been implemented in a laboratory environment with a repetition of forty-cycle operations. Human motion, specifically of the wrist, is guided by the robot tool center point (TCP), which is predefined for generating circular and square motions. Compared to the robot TCP motion considered baseline, the hand wrist motion deviates up to 3 cm. The approach is valuable for understanding the quality of human motion behaviors and can be scaled up for various applications involving human and robot shared workplaces.

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