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Feasibility study of robot enhanced mobility in children with cerebral palsy

Authors
Agrawal, Sunil KumarChen, XiKim, M. J.Lee, YoungmyungCho, H.P.Park, Gyung Jin
Issue Date
Aug-2012
Publisher
IEEE
Keywords
Cerebral palsy; Driving tasks; Feasibility studies; Developmental delay; Diseases; Enhanced mobility; Infant development; Education; Training sessions; Driving skills; Motor disability; Planning; Robots
Citation
2012 4th IEEE RAS & EMBS International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (BioRob), pp 1541 - 1548
Pages
8
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
2012 4th IEEE RAS & EMBS International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics (BioRob)
Start Page
1541
End Page
1548
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/36166
DOI
10.1109/BioRob.2012.6290675
ISSN
2155-1774
2155-1782
Abstract
Mobility is a causal factor in infant development. Neural impaired Infants, e.g., born with cerebral palsy (CP), have motor disability and are at risk for further developmental delays due to lack of self-generated mobility. It is possible that these impaired infants may benefit from robot enhanced mobility where they learn to drive a robot via a joystick, i.e., the mobility comes from the robot but the infants control the motion via a joystick. It is our hypothesis that such an enriched mobility experience will minimize delays in attaining other social and developmental childhood milestones. However, presently, there are no reported studies if children with CP would learn to drive a robot using a joystick and if they will sustain interest in doing so over multiple days of training. Also, it remains to be seen if such a robot enhanced mobility will impact development scores in this group of children. In this feasibility study, we use a special purpose robotic chair driven by a joystick to encourage infants and toddlers to drive. The study involved 20 children with CP in progressively difficult driving tasks over 10 sessions of training 20 minutes each. We found that after multiple training sessions, all children advanced in their driving skills and benefited in GMFM-88 functional scores. © 2012 IEEE.
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