Development of a Wearable Arm Exoskeleton for Teleoperation Featuring with Model-Data Fusion to Gravity Compensation

  • Lingda Meng
  • , Wusheng Chou*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The upper-limb exoskeleton is ergonomically designed to align with human arm motion and can be configured for deployment as a master tool manipulator (MTM) in teleoperation systems. However, existing teleoperated exoskeletons are limited by excessive weight and inadequate force feedback. This study proposes a novel lightweight exoskeleton with optimized shoulder and wrist joint structure, enabling full arm mobility and sufficient force feedback. In practical applications, gravitational forces can lead to muscle fatigue and degrade teleoperation performance, making compensation essential for ergonomic and safety. However, unknown system disturbance caused by unmodeled dynamics (such as internal compliance and cables) pose challenges for compensation precision. A theoretical dynamics model and a Bayesian neural network (BNN) trained on separate datasets to predict joint torques and their corresponding uncertainties were independently developed. Then a Bayesian fusion method was employed to combine model-based and data-driven estimates, using predicted standard deviations to assign fusion weights and produce a refined torque output. Compared to relying solely on the CAD model, the proposed fusion framework combines the physical consistency of model-based approaches with the adaptability of data-driven methods. Experiments ultimately demonstrate that the proposed algorithm effectively reduces modeling errors and enhances the accuracy and robustness of gravity compensation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number12546
JournalApplied Sciences (Switzerland)
Volume15
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Bayesian neural networks
  • gravity compensation
  • model-data fusion
  • upper-limb exoskeleton

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