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EDAN

The mobile robot EDAN (EMG-controlled daily assistant) is an assistive robotics system for people with severe motor impairments. The robot is controlled using muscle signals. Its integrated shared-autonomy capabilities facilitate everyday tasks such as drinking from a glass.
In 2016, EDAN was presented to the public for the first time.

Technical Data

Size: 1,1m × 1,1m × 1,6m
Weight: 220kg
Degrees of freedom: 28 (arm: 7, hand: 15, wheel chair: 2, chair: 4)
Nominal payload: 120kg
Energy supply: Battery with up to 6 h operating time
Speed: 1,6m/s or 5,8km/h
Working space: Comparable to that of a human
Features: • 1 RGB-D camera
• Up to 16 EMG electrodes
• EMG- or BCI-controlled
• Cartesian impedance control for sensitive interaction with the environment

System description

EDAN is a robotic research platform for people with severe motor impairments. The sensitive lightweight robot arm and the five-finger hand ensure safety for the user and allow a wide range of interactions with the environment. Instead of the usual joystick, muscle signals are measured on the skin surface (EMG) and subsequently processed to generate motion commands for the robot. Even in cases of advanced muscular atrophy, individual muscle signals are often measurable, making the use of EDAN possible. To make use of the robot as easy as possible, so-called shared-control techniques are implemented. The robot uses its knowledge of the world to predict the intentions of the user and to assist accordingly in the execution of the task. If, for example, the robot detects that the intention is to grasp a glass for drinking, the motion commands decoded from the EMG-signals are adapted to guide the hand securely to the glass and to grasp it.

A video illustrating EDAN is available on YouTube.

Edan - image gallery

EDAN, the robotic EMG-controlled daily assistant

Both the wheelchair and the robot arm mounted on it can be controlled by the person using EMG signals. 

Credit: DLR (CC-BY 3.0).

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EDAN, the robotic EMG%2dcontrolled daily assistant

Day-to-day mobility with EDAN

The EDAN assistive robotics system enables physically disabled people to regain their day-to-day mobility. 

Credit: DLR (CC-BY 3.0).

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Day%2dto%2dday mobility with EDAN

Using EDAN to grasp a drinking bottle

The assistive robot EDAN is used to grasp a drinking bottle via EMG-control. Using this technology, people with severe physical impairments can regain a high degree of independence in their everyday lives. 

Credit: DLR (CC-BY 3.0).

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Using EDAN to grasp a drinking bottle

Assistive robotics for people in wheelchairs

People with physical disabilities, especially those affecting the upper limbs, are dependent on the help of others even for very simple daily activities. These people can be helped by robotic assistive systems in conjunction with a brain-machine interface to carry out such simple tasks autonomously and thereby increase their independence. For this purpose, we are investigating various methods to enable people with physical disabilities to control robotic arms. 

Credit: DLR (CC-BY 3.0).

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Assistive robotics for people with tetraplegia

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Publications

  • Vogel et al., "An assistive decision-and-control architecture for force-sensitive hand–arm systems driven by human–machine interfaces", The International Journal of Robotics Research (IJRR), vol. 34, no. 6, pp. 763-780, May 2015.
  • Vogel et al., "Continuous robot control using surface electromyography of atrophic muscles", in Proc. of the 2013 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), Tokyo, Japan, pp. 845-850, November 2013.
  • Hochberg et al., "Reach and grasp by people with tetraplegia using a neurally controlled robotic arm", Nature, vol. 485, pp. 372-375, May 2012.
Contact
Jörn Vogel
German Aerospace Center

Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics
, Cognitive Robotics
Oberpfaffenhofen-Weßling

Tel.: +49 8153 28-2166

Fax: +49 8153 28-1134

Related links
EDAN in our 360° tour
Project SMiLE
Project SMART-Assist
HUG - DLR's bimanual haptic device
LWR III
EDAN at the Bayern Digital Congress 2017
Videos und Medien
Towards an EMG-controlled Daily Assistant (YouTube)
heise: DLR-Roboter sollen in Altenheim aushelfen
n-tv: Roboter "Edan" soll in der Pflege helfen
Downloads
EDAN flyer 2016 (2.63 MB)
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