Abstract

Individuals suffering from progressive neuromuscular diseases gradually lose all muscle control and therefore are forced to repeatedly adapt to new control interface technologies to maintain some level of independence. Accordingly, the ideal interface technology should adapt to the progression of paralysis. We propose an adaptive tongue-brain hybrid interface framework for the three-dimensional control of a robotic arm. The interface was tested with able-bodied individuals and individuals with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The experiments demonstrated the importance of flexible frameworks for cooperation between control modalities as this allows a critical optimization of the control performance relative to the disease stage. The hybrid framework allowed a 4-34% stepwise decrease in performance rather than a 200% decrease when moving directly from a tongue to a brain control interface. This hybrid framework is the first step towards a new concept of assistive robotic control with a higher focus on adapting to the functionality of disabled individuals.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherTechRxiv
Number of pages14
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Feb 2023

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