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Resumen de The Effect of Repeated Measurements Using an Upper Extremity Robot on Healthy Adults

Margaret A. Finley, Laura Dipietro, Jill Ohlhoff

  • We are expanding the use of the MIT-MANUS robotics to persons with impairments due exclusively to orthopedic disorders, with no neurological deficits. To understand the reli­ability of repeated measurements of the robotic tasks and the potential for registering changes due to learning is critical. Purposes of this study were to assess the learning effect of repeated exposure to robotic evaluations and to demonstrate the ability to detect a change in protocol in outcome measurements. Ten healthy, unimpaired subjects (mean age = 54.1 ± 6.4 years) performed six repeated evalua­tions consisting of unconstrained reaching movements to targets and circle drawing (with and without a visual template) on the MIT­MANUS. Reaching outcomes were aiming error, mean and peak speed, movement smoothness and duration. Outcomes for circle drawing were axis ratio metric and shoulder� elbow joint angles correlation metric (was based on a two-link model of the human arm and calculated hand path during the motions). Repeated-measures ANOVA (p = .05) deter­mined if difference existed between the ses­sions. Intraclass correlations (R) were calcu­lated. All variables were reliable, without learning across testing sessions. Intraclass cor­relation values were good to high (reaching, R =.80; circle drawing, R =.90). Robotic mea­surement ability to differentiate between simi­lar but distinct tasks was demonstrated as mea­sured by axis ratio metric (p < .001) and joint correlation metric (p = .001). Outcome mea­sures of the MIT-MANUS proved to be reli­able yet sensitive to change in healthy adults without motor learning over the course of repeated measurements.


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