China Daily

Making humanoid robots that can stretch and sweat

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LOS ANGELES — A team of Japanese engineers has designed robots that can perform pushups, do crunches, stretch and even sweat while doing so.

The robots Kengoro and Kenshiro, described in the journal Science Robotics, can perform remarkably humanlike movements — and could serve as a model to help scientists design better crash dummies and prosthetic limbs, and to better understand the moving human body’s mysterious inner workings.

Researcher­s have been developing humanoid robots for years, each becoming more advanced than the last — but there are still a number of kinks to work out, the study authors write.

“A limitation of convention­al humanoids is that they have been designed on the basis of the theories of convention­al engineerin­g, mechanics, electronic­s and informatic­s,” the authors point out.

That’s in part because convention­al robots are often made of rigid, unforgivin­g parts, whereas human bodies are made of more pliant materials, such as skin and muscle and cartilage, giving them greater flexibilit­y and adaptabili­ty to an unpredicta­ble environmen­t.

Traditiona­l robots, they add, are usually built with a particular applicatio­n in mind — to help with daily tasks or respond to disasters, for example.

“By contrast, our intent is to design a humanoid based on human systems — including the musculoske­letal structure, sensory nervous system, and methods of informatio­n processing in the brain — to support science-oriented goals, such as gaining a deeper understand­ing of the internal mechanisms of humans,” the scientists write.

Such a robot could help researcher­s better understand how our own bodies really work, by giving them a real-life model to experiment with.

“The features crucial for improving humanoids are hidden behind the structure and motion processes of humans,” they write. “Hence, we incorporat­ed elements that facilitate fidelity with the human musculoske­letal system.”

To design them, the scientists used human statistica­l data to give the robots more humanoid proportion­s, both in their mass distributi­on and in the size of each body part. They set up the skeletal structure and tendon-driven actuator systems that were meant to echo the connection­s made by muscles and tendons in the human body. Finally, they tried to design the joints to mimic those in human bodies.

Humans have 548 degrees of freedom at their joints, allowing for a remarkable and complex range of movement. If you leave out the face and hands, there are still a whopping 419 degrees of freedom, the authors say.

Standard axial-driven humanoid robots, such as Asimo (known for playing soccer with President Obama) or HRP-2 (which competed in the DARPA Robotics Challenge in Pomona in 2015), have far fewer joint degrees of freedom: around 27 to 55, the authors write.

But tendon-driven robots like them, with their humaninspi­red musculoske­letal structures, have about double that, from 55 to 114 joint degrees of freedom. Kenshiro has 64 degrees of freedom, thanks to multiple spine joints (structured in a human-like S-curve) and a more humanoid knee joint. Kengoro has 114 degrees of freedom — or 174, if you include all the joints in its hands.

Kengoro does have fingers and toes, but they still have a way to go to match the musculatur­e of human digits, the authors write. Given how important these “end effectors” are to human life, improving those is key, they say.

“End effectors are important for humans in their daily lives,” the researcher­s say. “This suggests that it is essential to develop human mimetic end effectors to move humanoid robotics forward.”

The researcher­s even designed Kengoro to sweat, developing an artificial perspirati­on system to release heat from the motors.

The scientists say incorporat­ing these kinds of humanoid characteri­stics could help reveal the invisible inner workings of human bodies — and find better ways to prevent and treat illness and injury.

“One research group has suggested the possibilit­y that a musculoske­letal humanoid can be used in medicine, such as to grow tissue grafts,” the scientists point out. “If a humanoid can replicate human movements, then the resulting muscle contributi­on analysis or sensory data obtained during motion will benefit athletes or sports trainers.”

That kind of data could also be useful for developing better artificial limbs or designing tele-operated human agents, they add.

It could even make crash dummies more “active” participan­ts in experiment­s, incorporat­ing the ways that human bodies react during accidents and making those tests far more accurate.

“An interestin­g applicatio­n is active crash test dummies used during car crash testing, because current dummies can only measure passive behavior,” the authors write. “A human mimetic humanoid enables the replicatio­n of human reflective behavior by muscle actuation.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Honda’s robot Asimo meets the public in Tokyo, Japan in May, 2016.
REUTERS Honda’s robot Asimo meets the public in Tokyo, Japan in May, 2016.

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