In-home and remote use of robotic body surrogates by people with profound motor deficits
Phillip M. Grice, Charles C. Kemp

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that people with profound motor deficits can effectively control robotic body surrogates remotely using a novel web-based interface, leading to meaningful improvements in task performance and quality of life.
Contribution
Introduces a new augmented reality interface enabling remote control of a human-scale robot by individuals with profound motor deficits, supported by empirical studies showing functional benefits.
Findings
Participants achieved meaningful improvements on ARAT
80% completed simulated self-care tasks
Users found the system easy to use and beneficial
Abstract
By controlling robots comparable to the human body, people with profound motor deficits could potentially perform a variety of physical tasks for themselves, improving their quality of life. The extent to which this is achievable has been unclear due to the lack of suitable interfaces by which to control robotic body surrogates and a dearth of studies involving substantial numbers of people with profound motor deficits. We developed a novel, web-based augmented reality interface that enables people with profound motor deficits to remotely control a PR2 mobile manipulator from Willow Garage, which is a human-scale, wheeled robot with two arms. We then conducted two studies to investigate the use of robotic body surrogates. In the first study, 15 novice users with profound motor deficits from across the United States controlled a PR2 in Atlanta, GA to perform a modified Action Research…
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