This wearable robot can assist people with walking

Researchers from South Korea's Chung-Ang University recently introduced a new wearable robot designed to assist humans who have difficulties walking due to aging, muscle weakness, surgeries, or specific medical conditions.
The robot, presented in a paper published in Science Robotics, was created to improve balance while also reducing the energy spent while walking — the so-called metabolic cost.
"Our recent paper was primarily inspired by the recognition that most wearable robots for gait assistance have focused solely on movements in the sagittal plane," Giuk Lee, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told Tech Xplore. "However, walking is inherently a three-dimensional activity, and movements in other planes are just as crucial."
The robot created by Lee and his colleagues focuses on the frontal plane — which supports movements and lateral stability while walking.
"Traditionally, research on walking motion has considered forward movement and lateral balance as separate functions," Myunghee Kim, co-author of the paper, said. "Only recently has the fore-aft direction's assistance been acknowledged for its contribution to lateral stability. Yet, the reverse — the influence of lateral assistance on fore-aft walking efficiency — remains insufficiently explored."
The researchers argue that the metabolic cost of walking could be reduced using wearable robots that mimic the natural hip abduction moment — which is the movement of the leg away from the body's midline that supports walking and many other actions humans perform every day.
"The wearable robot for hip abduction assistance that we've developed operates on the principle that walking efficiency can be improved by supporting lateral body movements," Lee said. "As we walk forward, our body's center of mass naturally shifts side to side to maintain balance — a process known as recovery. During this recovery phase, the hip abduction muscles are engaged. Our device assists these muscles, making it easier for the wearer to recover their center of mass with less effort."
Researchers evaluated their robot's performance in both simulations and real-world experiments, and the results were highly promising, showing that the robot reduced the metabolic cost of walking by 11.6% compared to normal, unassisted walking — while also improving balance and stability.
Essentially, the unique design of this hip abduction assistance robot allows it to effectively "replace" part of the efforts that humans would normally place when walking.
"Our study demonstrates a substantial role for lateral assistance in enhancing walking efficiency by facilitating a more effective transfer of the body's center of mass from one foot to the other," Kim added. "This insight is especially encouraging for individuals with reduced muscle strength, offering a new direction for support mechanisms. Moving forward, it will be important to explore how lateral assistance could help those with limited mobility, potentially transforming rehabilitation and support strategies."
Researchers are now looking to improve their design further and eventually commercialize it as a robotic system for supporting both rehabilitation and everyday use. In that sense, they see the robot useful for older adults, patients who underwent leg or hip surgeries, and other people who experience difficulties walking.
"For future research, we plan to delve deeper into how hip abduction affects walking balance," Lee added. "We've observed that hip abduction not only improves gait efficiency but may also influence balance. We aim to explore the potential of wearable robots in enhancing walking balance."
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