Abstrakt: |
This article is the second in a two-part series analyzing human arm and hand motion during a wide range of unstructured tasks. In this work, we track the hand of healthy individuals as they perform a variety of activities of daily living (ADLs) in three ways decoupled from hand orientation: end-point locations of the hand trajectory, whole path trajectories of the hand, and straight-line paths generated using start and end points of the hand. These data are examined by a clustering procedure to reduce the wide range of hand use to a smaller representative set. Hand orientations are subsequently analyzed for the end-point location clustering results and subsets of orientations are identified in three reference frames: global, torso, and forearm. Data driven methods that are used include dynamic time warping (DTW), DTW barycenter averaging (DBA), and agglomerative hierarchical clustering with Ward’s linkage. Analysis of the end-point locations, path trajectory, and straight-line path trajectory identified 5, 5, and 7 ADL task categories, respectively, while hand orientation analysis identified up to 4 subsets of orientations for each task location, discretized and classified to the facets of a rhombicuboctahedron. Together these provide insight into our hand usage in daily life and inform an implementation in prosthetic or robotic devices using sequential control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |