Ultrasonic Tethering to Enable Side-by-Side Following for Powered Wheelchairs.

Journal: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
Published Date:

Abstract

In social situations, people who use a powered wheelchair must divide their attention between navigating the chair and conversing with people. These conversations could lead to increased mental stress when navigating and distraction from maneuvering the chair. As a solution that maintains a good conversation distance between the wheelchair and the accompanying person (Social Following), a wheelchair control system was developed to provide automated side-by-side following by wirelessly connecting the wheelchair to the person. Two ultrasonic range sensors and three piezoelectric ultrasonic transducers were used to identify the accompanying person and determine their position and heading. Identification involved an ultrasonic beacon worn on the person's side, at hip level, and receivers on the wheelchair. A drive control algorithm maintained a constant conversation distance along the person's trajectory. A plug-and-play prototype was developed and connected to a Permobil F5 Corpus wheelchair with a modified Eightfold Technologies SmartChair Remote. Results demonstrated that the system can navigate a wheelchair based on the accompanying person's trajectory, which is advantageous for users who require hands-free wheelchair control during social activities.

Authors

  • Theja Ram Pingali
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada. tping033@uOttawa.ca.
  • Edward D Lemaire
    a Centre for Rehab Research and Development , Ottawa Hospital Research Institute , Ottawa , Canada.
  • Natalie Baddour
    f Department of Mechanical Engineering , University of Ottawa , Ottawa , Canada.