Robotic therapy aids kids’ handwriting skills

via Pinterest

Researchers from Leeds and Bradford are working with colleagues from the United States to develop an exciting new robotic device that helps children to practice and improve their manual (hand) coordination.

The findings of a pilot study are being presented today, 5th September 2013 at the British Psychological Society’s Annual Conference in Reading, detailing the first time this innovative new technology has been trialled in a UK school.

The collaboration involves Professor Mark Mon-Williams, Dr. Liam Hill from the University of Leeds, Katy Shires from the Bradford Institute of Health Research and Professor Geoffrey Bingham’s lab from the University of Indiana (USA).  This team has been working on creating a haptic robotic training system that gives children feedback and scaffolds their performance as they practice hand and wrist movements commonly made during handwriting and other manual tasks.

The device has already been tested in a study in the United States, results showing that the increased feedback it provides particularly aids children who have underlying movement problems, providing them with the extra support they need whilst trying to learn everyday tasks they typically have great difficulty with (e.g. handwriting, using cutlery and dressing themselves).

How does it work?  A child holds a pen connected to the cradle of a small robotic arm (circled in red).  They then move the pen around in order to play ‘computer games’ presented on the screen of the computer (circled in blue).  The games the children play require them to practice hand and wrist movements commonly made during handwriting (and other manual tasks).  As the child plays the games the robot’s arm (purple arrow) helps them learn the correct movements by pushing and pulling the pen in the direction required to make the right moves.  The strength to which the arm pushes/pulls towards the correct movement can be varied so that as the child becomes more confident the arm can reduce its level of support, allowing the child to increasingly do the task on their own.

What are we doing?Recently we have just completed the first UK pilot study using this robotic device, demonstrating its feasibility for use (i) in the classroom and (ii) with children of a younger age than previously studied.  Working with a small number of five to seven year old children in a primary school in Bradford, who had a wide range of manual abilities, we investigated their level of motivation and enjoyment whilst practicing for 20 minutes on a variety of robotic arm tasks presented previously in US-based studies using the system.  We also trialed simpler versions of these tasks, which were expected to be more age appropriate for the younger children we were working with.

All the children found the tasks highly enjoyable and were able to perform them to an acceptable level.  Differences in performance between children previously identified by their classroom teachers as having handwriting difficulties were also noticeable (e.g. taking longer to complete, making more errors if the level of support the robotic arm provided was reduced).  Plans are now underway to run a larger intervention study within schools in Bradford that will formally investigate whether the findings from the US can be replicated in younger school children here in the UK (i.e. will the system help them improve their handwriting and manual-dexterity development?).

See Also

Read more . . .

 

 

The Latest Bing News on:
Robotic therapy
The Latest Google Headlines on:
Robotic therapy

[google_news title=”” keyword=”Robotic therapy” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

The Latest Bing News on:
Haptic robotic training system
  • Interview: Suzanne Gildert leaves Sanctuary to focus on AI consciousness
    on April 30, 2024 at 2:26 am

    Earlier this month, co-founder and CTO Suzanne Gildert left humanoid robotics company Sanctuary AI and her beloved Phoenix robot to focus full-time on AI safety, ethics and consciousness. We spoke to ...

  • Kevin Huang
    on April 18, 2024 at 1:00 am

    Kevin Huang is an electrical engineer by training and has a passion for robotics. His doctoral research focused on evaluating haptic feedback, virtual fixtures, and usability in teleoperated robotic ...

  • Novel robotic training program reduces physician errors placing central lines
    on April 17, 2024 at 2:28 pm

    Deployed in 2022 at the Penn State College of Medicine, the researchers recently assessed how the training impacted ... central line on a novel dynamic haptic robotic trainer that can simulate ...

  • Novel robotic training program reduces physician errors placing central lines
    on April 17, 2024 at 12:04 pm

    Penn State researchers developed a robotic simulation training programing ... practice placing the central line on a novel dynamic haptic robotic trainer that can simulate various conditions ...

  • 1 New Reason to Buy Intuitive Surgical Stock and Hold Forever
    on March 24, 2024 at 5:00 pm

    More importantly, the latest da Vinci model features a haptic feedback system ... are devoted to making new imaging systems, robotic toolheads, training programs, software packages, and other ...

  • Program Overview
    on November 7, 2023 at 1:06 am

    This program is designed to provide intense, hands-on training to bridge the knowledge ... a world leader in robotics, haptic interfaces, and biomedical engineering. Project areas include multi-robot ...

  • Smarter Training for Surgeons
    on May 7, 2023 at 1:36 pm

    “You can’t touch the environment in a meaningful way,” says Richard Vincent, CEO of FundamentalVR, whose VR surgical simulator fixes that by incorporating haptic feedback (similar to a ...

  • The Sensitive Robot: How Haptic Technology is Closing the Mechanical Gap
    on March 9, 2023 at 9:45 pm

    It's called haptic technology, and it represents one of the most challenging research fields in robotics. But with new sensors and feedback systems finally making it out of the lab, it also ...

  • Robots that share their feelings
    on May 31, 2019 at 9:31 pm

    Tactile sensors and haptic actuators for measuring and controlling the forces exerted and felt by the robot are key to human-robot interactive teleoperation systems. This technology is a ...

  • Wireless Robotic Gripper With Haptic Feedback
    on June 29, 2016 at 9:26 am

    We’re not sure what kind of, “High School,” [Sam Baumgarten] and [Graham Hughes] go to that gave them the tools to execute their robotic gripper so well. We do know that it was not like ours.

The Latest Google Headlines on:
Haptic robotic training system

[google_news title=”” keyword=”haptic robotic training system” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]

What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
Scroll To Top