Abstract

The thumb is the most important finger of the human hand and has a great influence on grasp manipulations. However, the extent to which joints other than the thumb joints affect the grasp, and thus, which joints should be included in a prosthetic hand, remains an open issue. In this paper, we focus on the metacarpophalangeal joints of the four fingers, except the thumb, which can generate flexion/extension and abduction/adduction motions. The contribution of these joints to grasping was evaluated in four aspects: grasp size, grasp force, grasp quality and grasp success rate. Six subjects participated in experiments with respect to the maximum grasp size and grasp force. The results show that possessing abduction mobility of the metacarpophalangeal joints can increase the grasp size by 4.67 ± 1.93 mm and the grasp force by 5.27 ± 4.25 N. Then, the grasping quality and success rate were tested in a simulation platform and using a robotic hand, respectively. The results show that grasp quality was promoted by 76.7% in the simulated environment with abduction mobility compared to without abduction mobility, whereas the grasp success rate was promoted by 68.3%. We believe that the results of this work can benefit the understanding of hand function and prosthetic hand design.

Highlights

  • A high priority in prosthetic hand design is the number of degrees of freedom (DOF), which depends on the usage scenario, actuation method, control algorithm and so on [12,40]

  • Ab/d DOFs are frequently neglected in robotic hand design, especially for commercial prosthetic hands

  • Experiments based on grasping a set of disks with various diameters by human hand, simulator, and robotic hand were conducted, which indicated that ab/d DOFs could distinctly promote the grasp size, grasp force, grasp quality, and grasp success rate

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Summary

Introduction

Sprague et al analytically and experimentally investigated the kinematic behavior of the human MCP joint [7]. They analyzed the biomechanical characteristics of MCP joint prosthesis design with fresh cadaver finger rays in later work [8]. Vinjamuri et al presented time-varying synergies that were observed during reach and grasp experiments in angular velocity profiles of MCP joints and PIP joints in [10]. These works only studied the characteristics of the joint itself and did not take the task into consideration

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