“…Physiotherapy exercises are considered the most important approach to restoring hand functions [5] since the conventional methods of phys-iotherapy have some drawbacks, as follows: 1) the therapist needs to do many physical works, leading to fatigue and lack of carefulness in training the patients, 2) patients also become tired due to repetitive exercises, resulting in stopping treatment, and 3) a long time is needed for the patient's recovery, leading to increased treatment costs [6][7][8]. Different designed robots fabricated performing physiotherapy exercises on the hand, considered exoskeleton, such as soft exoskeleton robotic systems [9], Multi-Sensorial Immersive Dynamic Autonomous Systems (MIDAS) [10], and Hand Exoskeleton for Rehabilitation Objectives (HERO) [11]. In this field, other categories also work on devices with passive movements, such as a portable exoskeleton [12], a multi degree of freedom device for fingers [13], SPO (Script Passive Orthosis) [14], and an interactive rehabilitation robot [15], mostly fabricated for finger rehabilitation, including café [16], assist-on-fingers [17], ExoSkeleton for Index Finger [18], and IOTA (Isolated Orthosis for Thumb Actuation) [19].…”