Bimanual Motor Strategies and Handedness Role During Human-Exoskeleton Haptic Interaction
Elisa Galofaro, Erika D'Antonio, Nicola Lotti, Fabrizio Patane', Maura, Casadio, Lorenzo Masia

TL;DR
This study investigates how hand dominance and haptic feedback influence bimanual manipulation strategies using exoskeletons, revealing that handedness and object properties significantly affect coordination and force control during virtual object manipulation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel experimental setup with impedance-controlled exoskeletons to analyze bimanual strategies and the role of handedness in virtual object manipulation.
Findings
Hand roles depend on movement direction and haptic features.
Haptic feedback influences bimanual strategies.
Left-handers exhibit better force control.
Abstract
Bimanual object manipulation involves multiple visuo-haptic sensory feedbacks arising from the interaction with the environment that are managed from the central nervous system and consequently translated in motor commands. Kinematic strategies that occur during bimanual coupled tasks are still a scientific debate despite modern advances in haptics and robotics. Current technologies may have the potential to provide realistic scenarios involving the entire upper limb extremities during multi-joint movements but are not yet exploited to their full potential. The present study explores how hands dynamically interact when manipulating a shared object through the use of two impedance-controlled exoskeletons programmed to simulate bimanually coupled manipulation of virtual objects. We enrolled twenty-six participants (2 groups: right-handed and left-handed) who were requested to use both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Motor Control and Adaptation · Muscle activation and electromyography studies
