Spine-Inspired Continuum Soft Exoskeleton for Stoop Lifting Assistance
Xiaolong Yang, Tzu-Hao Huang, Hang Hu, Shuangyue Yu, Sainan Zhang,, Xianlian Zhou, Alessandra Carriero, Guang Yue, and Hao Su

TL;DR
This paper introduces a spine-inspired continuum soft exoskeleton designed to assist various lifting activities, reducing back forces and discomfort without impeding natural movement, demonstrated through modeling and experimental validation.
Contribution
It presents a novel, conformal, soft exoskeleton that supports multiple movements and reduces spinal forces, addressing limitations of rigid exoskeletons in ergonomic assistance.
Findings
Successfully modeled human-robot biomechanics for the device.
Achieved force tracking error of 6.63 N in experiments.
Demonstrated potential to reduce back forces during lifting.
Abstract
Back injuries are the most prevalent work-related musculoskeletal disorders and represent a major cause of disability. Although innovations in wearable robots aim to alleviate this hazard, the majority of existing exoskeletons are obtrusive because the rigid linkage design limits natural movement, thus causing ergonomic risk. Moreover, these existing systems are typically only suitable for one type of movement assistance, not ubiquitous for a wide variety of activities. To fill in this gap, this paper presents a new wearable robot design approach continuum soft exoskeleton. This spine-inspired wearable robot is unobtrusive and assists both squat and stoops while not impeding walking motion. To tackle the challenge of the unique anatomy of spine that is inappropriate to be simplified as a single degree of freedom joint, our robot is conformal to human anatomy and it can reduce multiple…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProsthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics · Spinal Cord Injury Research · Aortic Disease and Treatment Approaches
