Abstract

BackgroundPhysical interactions between two people are ubiquitous in our daily lives, and an integral part of many forms of rehabilitation. However, few studies have investigated forces arising from physical interactions between humans during a cooperative motor task, particularly during overground movements. As such, the direction and magnitude of interaction forces between two human partners, how those forces are used to communicate movement goals, and whether they change with motor experience remains unknown. A better understanding of how cooperative physical interactions are achieved in healthy individuals of different skill levels is a first step toward understanding principles of physical interactions that could be applied to robotic devices for motor assistance and rehabilitation.MethodsInteraction forces between expert and novice partner dancers were recorded while performing a forward-backward partnered stepping task with assigned “leader” and “follower” roles. Their position was recorded using motion capture. The magnitude and direction of the interaction forces were analyzed and compared across groups (i.e. expert-expert, expert-novice, and novice-novice) and across movement phases (i.e. forward, backward, change of direction).ResultsAll dyads were able to perform the partnered stepping task with some level of proficiency. Relatively small interaction forces (10–30N) were observed across all dyads, but were significantly larger among expert-expert dyads. Interaction forces were also found to be significantly different across movement phases. However, interaction force magnitude did not change as whole-body synchronization between partners improved across trials.ConclusionsRelatively small interaction forces may communicate movement goals (i.e. “what to do and when to do it”) between human partners during cooperative physical interactions. Moreover, these small interactions forces vary with prior motor experience, and may act primarily as guiding cues that convey information about movement goals rather than providing physical assistance. This suggests that robots may be able to provide meaningful physical interactions for rehabilitation using relatively small force levels.

Highlights

  • Physical interactions between two people are ubiquitous in our daily lives, and an integral part of many forms of rehabilitation

  • Physical human-human interactions (HHI) can occur between two people with different motor abilities such as a physical therapist helping a patient learn to balance during rehabilitation

  • Post-hoc testing revealed that Expert follower (EE) dyads had significantly larger peak interaction forces (12.3 ± 2.76 N) than the Novice leader-Novice follower (NN) dyads (5.86 ± 0.96 N), p < 0.01 and the Expert leaderNovice follower (EN) dyads

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Summary

Introduction

Physical interactions between two people are ubiquitous in our daily lives, and an integral part of many forms of rehabilitation. Despite the prevalence of HHI in our lives, interaction forces during cooperative motor tasks have only been characterized in a few studies [1,2,3,4], and never during overground walking How such forces differ between individuals of varying skill levels, such as a physical therapist and patient remain unknown [5]. By studying how two unimpaired adult partners interact when performing a joint motor task, our goal is to reveal sensorimotor principles underlying intuitive physical interactions Such principles of physical interaction could be used to improve the effectiveness of robots that provide permanent motor assistance or short-term rehabilitation for locomotor deficits [11, 12], while reducing the training and adaptation required of the user [13]

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