The 11th IASTED International Conference on
Biomedical Engineering
BioMed 2014
June 23 – 25, 2014
Zurich, Switzerland
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Novel Robots for Patient-Cooperative Rehabilitation
Abstract
Robotic technologies and their clinical applications play an increasingly important role in neurorehabilitation. However, most rehabilitation robots work with patients in a “master-slave” relationship, thus, forcing the patient to follow a predetermined motion without consideration of voluntary efforts or behaviour of the patient. During such unidirectional communication, the loop is not closed by the human in order to adjust the device to the biomechanical or physiological state of the patient, or his/her engagement and intention. We developed novel neurorehabilitation robots that offer a new approach by placing the human into the loop. Our robots enable a bi-directional interaction and assist in a compliant way, just as much as needed, so that the patient can contribute to the movement with own voluntary effort. The patient is challenged in a moderate but engaging and motivating way without causing undue stress or harm. In this talk, I will present examples of patient-cooperative control that have been implemented in our novel robots applied to the neurorehabilitation of gait and arm function.
Biography of the Keynote Speaker
Robert Riener has authored and co-authored more than 400 peer-reviewed journal and conference articles, 20 books and book chapters as well as 20 patents. He was a director of the IFESS and president of the AUTOMED. Currently, he is an editorial member of six international journals, including the IEEE TNSRE and Applied Bionics and Biomechanics. Furthermore, he serves as reviewer for many international journals as well as for the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF), the German Ministry of Research (BMBF), the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) and the Engineering and Physics Sciences Research (EPSRC), United Kingdom. He has received more than 15 personal distinctions and awards including the humanTech Innovation Prize in 2005, the Swiss Technology Award in 2006, the IEEE TNSRE Best Paper Award 2010, and the euRobotics Technology Transfer Awards 2011 and 2012.