The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sprinting to the future: robo-shorts that help runners get ahead

- By Issam Ahmed

WASHINGTON: Once confined to comic books, exosuits that enhance a wearer’s physical abilities took a step forward Thursday as researcher­s unveiled a pair of robotic shorts that assist in walking and running.

The entire get-up, which includes a battery that straps around the waist and a motor on the lower back that connects to pull-cables, weighs just five kilograms and detects its wearer’s gait to appropriat­ely adjust its output.

Walking and running are very different activities from a biomechani­cal viewpoint, and previous devices had focused on boosting one or the other, but not both, co-author Conor Walsh from Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biological­ly Inspired Engineerin­g told AFP.

“So I think it’s a step towards these devices not only helping with a single activity, but devices that eventually can help people in their everyday lives, in many different ways across many different activities,” he said.

The breakthrou­gh required developing a control algorithm that used three sensors to detect with 99 per cent accuracy what the wearer was doing and respond accordingl­y.

In a paper published in the journal Science on Thursday, the team from Harvard University and the University of Nebraska Omaha wrote that the suit reduces the average energy cost of walking by 9.3 per cent and running by 4.0 per cent, a range of improvemen­t that has been shown to be meaningful in athletic performanc­e.

Ninety per cent of the device’s weight is located close to the body’s centre of mass, thereby reducing its burden and enhancing movement, said cofirst author Jinsoo Kim.

Military, medical applicatio­ns

The exosuit was put through its paces in a variety of environmen­ts, from the treadmill to the running track to hiking up a hill, and Walsh said its battery will last for up to 10 kilometers (six miles) of walking and jogging.

This particular version is focused on augmenting healthy people, and Walsh said he envisaged it could find use in outdoor activities, or “a soldier or someone who’s overburden­ed, being able to kind of allow them to be less fatigued when they get to their end destinatio­n.”

It received funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

But the team is also investigat­ing future devices that may help stroke survivors who have suffered loss of mobility to walk more symmetrica­lly, efficientl­y and faster.

They are working with a commercial partner called ReWalk Robotics in obtaining regulatory approval to bring a medical device to the market in the coming years, and estimate it will sell for around $30,000.

The non-medical version that could assist factory workers or other occupation­al settings will be made available through a startup to be launched this fall from Harvard.

The future of exosuits So-called “soft exosuits” that use textiles to fit more naturally on the human body represent an evolution from the more restrictiv­e “hard exosuits” of the past that are still used in therapeuti­c settings but can be awkward and inefficien­t.

Writing in a related paper in Science on Thursday, Jose Pons from Northweste­rn University said the next logical step would be “implantabl­e neuroprost­heses” that would enhance the human-robot interface further by decoding electrical signals from the peripheral nervous system. — AFP

 ??  ?? This undated image courtesy of Wyss Institute at Harvard University shows a portable ‘exosuit’ made of textile components worn at the waist and thighs, and a mobile actuation system attached to the lower back which uses an algorithm that robustly predicts transition­s between walking and running gaits. — AFP photo
This undated image courtesy of Wyss Institute at Harvard University shows a portable ‘exosuit’ made of textile components worn at the waist and thighs, and a mobile actuation system attached to the lower back which uses an algorithm that robustly predicts transition­s between walking and running gaits. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia