![RTEmagicC_CMGCorsetRender2_1p6mb.gif[1]t6u RTEmagicC_CMGCorsetRender2_1p6mb.gif[1]t6u](https://i0.wp.com/innovationtoronto.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/RTEmagicC_CMGCorsetRender2_1p6mb.gif1t6u.gif?fit=250%2C310&ssl=1)
Balance aids used in everyday life and in rehabilitation centers are useful but far from perfect. Sticks, walkers, crutches, and hand rails change posture and prevent you from using your hands when doing things like opening doors, carrying groceries, or picking up the phone. In addition, more advanced tools, such as mobile body weight support systems or robotic trainers, take up a lot of space or can only be used in specific environments. Under the leadership of Professor Heike Vallery, Andrew Berry, Daniel Lemus and Saher Jabeen, researchers from TU Delft‘s BioMechanical Engineering department, developed the GyBAR: a backpack-like portable robot that supports balance during rehabilitation. The backpack contains a gyroscopic actuator – a rotating motor that can be repositioned with electric motors – that supports the balance in various activities and in different environments, while leaving the hands free. The results of the first experiments with humans and potential end users have been published in Scientific Reports by Nature.
See the article Controller synthesis and clinical exploration of wearable gyroscopic actuators to support human balance
Risks of falling
Falling is the leading cause of accident-related injury in all age groups, but it is especially dangerous for people who suffer from conditions that affect motor skills or lead to sensory or cognitive impairment. Adults over the age of 65 are at great risk of serious injury in the event of a fall; in addition, if they sustain a hip fracture, they have a 25 percent chance of dying from their injuries within six to 12 months of the fall. For the development of an auxiliary device that supports balance and leaves the hands free, while at the same time being able to automatically detect and correct instability, portable robotics offers many possibilities.
Inspiration from space
The inspiration for GyBAR’s development came from space: satellites are able to change their orientation in space without using force or moment relative to their environment (Figure 1). Moment can be applied to a satellite (or to the human body) by changing the angular momentum of internal flywheels, realizing or preventing a certain rotation. One technique uses the so-called gyroscopic effect, which can be observed with spinning tops, which resist the effect of gravity (Figure 2). Researchers at TU Delft have succeeded in building an actuator based on the gyroscopic effect, which is usually applied in sensors (think of the gyroscope sensor in a mobile phone, which measures movements).
The Latest Updates from Bing News & Google News
Go deeper with Bing News on:
Backpack-like portable robot
- Vine-like robot that 'grows' towards heat could put out fires
A vine-like robot can steer itself towards a source of heat without sensors, batteries or motors. The technology could be used to create smart hosepipes that approach a burning building or forest ...
- Don’t Write Like a Robot
Artificial intelligence can teach academics the importance of having a distinctive writing voice — one has been conditioned by the experience of being a human and that a robot would have trouble ...
- A fairy-like robot flies by the power of wind and light
The development of stimuli-responsive polymers has brought about a wealth of material-related opportunities for next-generation small-scale, wirelessly controlled soft-bodied robots. For some time now ...
- This $40 Amazon backpack makes travelling through airport security 'a breeze'
According to Amazon shoppers, the Cafele TSA Friendly Travel Laptop Backpack is the latest genius travel find to love. It rings in at $40, and has been called "awesome for traveling." Designed for ...
- 'Mobile Suit Gundam' anime robot backpack now real-world backpacks too
with the launch of a line of for-human Gundam backpacks that look just like their anime robot counterparts. Strapped to your back, these bags replicate the look of one of three different mobile suits ...
Go deeper with Google Headlines on:
Backpack-like portable robot
[google_news title=”” keyword=”backpack-like portable robot” num_posts=”5″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
Go deeper with Bing News on:
Keeping people from falling
- Opinion: Falling electric car prices don’t help low-income Americans
The great electric vehicle price war is here. Weeks after Tesla slashed prices across its U.S. lineup, Ford is set to follow suit. On Monday, the Michigan-based automaker announced price cuts on its ...
- Deaths rise on Space Coast despite steady COVID cases, falling hospitalizations
The CDC reported 15 deaths for the latest reporting period. That number has remained fewer than 10 for several months.
- Ashley Nunes: Falling electric car prices don’t help low-income Americans. And that’s a big problem
The great electric vehicle price war is here. Weeks after Tesla slashed prices across its U.S. lineup, Ford is set to follow suit.
- Why it’s too late to trim trees to keep them from falling in the next freeze
As tree limbs drop from the weight of heavy ice, a local tree trimmer said it is too late to prune live oaks and cedar trees to prevent more from falling in the next freeze. That’s thanks to ...
- COVID-19 in NC: Key numbers keep falling for another week
Most of North Carolina's key COVID-19 numbers kept falling. New cases and hospital admissions each dropped by about 10 percent last week, according to the latest weekly update Wednesday from the state ...
Go deeper with Google Headlines on:
Keeping people from falling
[google_news title=”” keyword=”keeping people from falling” num_posts=”5″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]