
Institution Nationale des Invalides / Centre dEtudes et de Recherche sur lAppareillage des Handicapés
Institution Nationale des Invalides / Centre dEtudes et de Recherche sur lAppareillage des Handicapés
1 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in ProjectFrom 2020Partners:INSA Hauts-de-France, Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Arts et Métiers - Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak, LAMIH, INS2I, Centre d'Etude et de Recherche sur l'Appareillage des Handicapés (CERAH), Institution Nationale des Invalides / Recherche +8 partnersINSA Hauts-de-France,Ecole Nationale Supérieure d'Arts et Métiers - Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak,LAMIH,INS2I,Centre d'Etude et de Recherche sur l'Appareillage des Handicapés (CERAH), Institution Nationale des Invalides / Recherche,Laboratoire dAutomatique, de Mécanique et dInformatique Industrielles et Humaines,Institut de Recherche en Informatique et Systèmes Aléatoires,UVHC,CNRS,Institution Nationale des Invalides / Centre dEtudes et de Recherche sur lAppareillage des Handicapés,Ecole Nationale Supérieure dArts et Métiers - Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak,Paris 13 University,ENSAMFunder: French National Research Agency (ANR) Project Code: ANR-19-CE19-0007Funder Contribution: 524,794 EURLocomotion with a manual wheelchair (MWC) submits the upper-limbs of the manual wheelchair users (MWU) to an important stress, which varies according to the environment. To assist MWU in selecting the paths that preserve their upper limbs, a cost reflecting the physical demand of the successive situations along the possible paths must be attributed. In the current state of knowledge and accessibility standards, an obstacle has no graduation and can only be marked as crossable or not, which cannot reflect, neither the heterogeneity of the situations, nor the link between their accessibility and the physical and technical abilities of the MWU. To go beyond these limitations, this project aims at defining biomechanical costs that can be attributed to the environmental situations, and that could be implemented in future optimal path selection algorithms. This will make it possible to provide MWU with individualized paths taking into account their individual capacities. To do so, a musculoskeletal model will be developed to quantify various biomechanical quantities that will serve as input data for the definition of the biomechanical costs. These costs will be computed for various situations, reproduced in a realistic MWC locomotion simulator developed in the framework of this proposal. Such a project will provide original and useful data for accessibility evaluation, planning of urban development services and assistance adaptation. It will also be the basis for further work on MWU evaluation and paths characterization to provide personalized cost-optimal paths.
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