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Robotics Research Is Improving Lives of People With Disabilities

by Joan Trombetti, Writer | August 12, 2008
Robots and people team
in research effort
Robotics may be the answer for people with disabilities who are fighting the battle to once again regain the use of their limbs. A research team made up of students and engineers from the Rochester Institute of Technology, Georgia Tech and Georgetown University are lending a "robotic" hand. The project is funded through the National Science Foundation Computer, Information Science and Engineering.

The team is utilizing physiological information, or bio-signals, produced by the human body, to improve the performance of external assistive devices, called orthoses, which aid individuals with physical disabilities, such as strokes or major spinal cord injuries, regain the use of their arms and legs.

According to Edward Brown, assistant professor of electrical engineering at RIT and director of the Biomechatronics Learning Laboratory, the data collected through this project will assist designers and engineers in developing more sophisticated assistive aids for individuals suffering from various neuromuscular diseases and musculoskeletal injuries. He says that people with these types of ailments, such as muscular dystrophy, have extremely weak muscles that waste away over time. They experience difficulties in the simplest of physical tasks, for example, picking up a cup or holding a spoon. A robotic orthosis that takes advantage of the individual's residual strength and any remaining physiological information in their limbs, such as an electromyographic signal produced in muscles, could ultimately assist muscular dystrophy patients regain significant use of there limbs.

Researchers in the Biomechatronic Learning Laboratory are studying individuals with healthy muscles to develop a baseline, and then plan to test their robotic system on patients currently suffering from muscular dystrophy. The results from the project will be used to enhance the development of orthotics technologies and also contribute to the broader field of rehabilitation robotics, including the creation of better prosthetic limbs. For more information see http://www.nsf.gov/dir/index.jsp?org=CISE