Kyberd, P.J and Jones, B (2011) The use of underactuation in prosthetic grasping. In: IFToMM/ASME International Workshop, 19 August 2010, Montréal, Canada.
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Abstract
Underactuation as a method of driving prosthetic hands has a long history. The pragmatic requirements of such a device to be light enough to be worn and used regularly have meant that any multi degree of freedom prosthetic hand must have fewer actuators than the usable degrees of freedom. Aesthetics ensures that while the hand needs five fingers, five actuators have considerable mass, and only in recent years has it even been possible to construct a practical anthropomorphic hand with five motors. Thus there is an important trade off as to which fingers are driven, and which joints on which fingers are actuated, and how the forces are distributed to create a functional device. This paper outlines some of the historical solutions created for this problem and includes those designs of recent years that are now beginning to be used in the commercial environment.
Type du document: | Conference or Workshop Item (Paper) |
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Sujets: | Conferences |
Divisions: | UNSPECIFIED |
Déposé par: | Editeur UVT |
Date de dépôt: | 06 Apr 2011 16:09 |
Dernière modification: | 06 Apr 2011 16:09 |
URI: | http://pf-mh.uvt.rnu.tn/id/eprint/132 |
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