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OverviewWearable exoskeletons are electro-mechanical systems designed to assist, augment, or enhance motion and mobility in a variety of human motion applications and scenarios. The applications, ranging from providing power supplementation to assist the wearers to situations where human motion is resisted for exercising applications, cover a wide range of domains such as medical devices for patient rehabilitation training recovering from trauma, movement aids for disabled persons, personal care robots for providing daily living assistance, and reduction of physical burden in industrial and military applications. The development of effective and affordable wearable exoskeletons poses several design, control and modelling challenges to researchers and manufacturers. Novel technologies are therefore being developed in adaptive motion controllers, human-robot interaction control, biological sensors and actuators, materials and structures, etc. In this book, the editors and authors report recent advances and technology breakthroughs in exoskeleton developments. It will be of interest to engineers and researchers in academia and industry as well as manufacturing companies interested in developing new markets in wearable exoskeleton robotics. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Shaoping Bai (Associate Professor, Aalborg University, Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, Denmark) , Gurvinder Singh Virk (Technical Director, InnotecUK, UK) , Thomas Sugar (Professor, Arizona State University, USA)Publisher: Institution of Engineering and Technology Imprint: Institution of Engineering and Technology ISBN: 9781785613029ISBN 10: 1785613022 Pages: 408 Publication Date: 11 May 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsSection 1: Review and overall requirements Chapter 1: Lower-limb wearable robotics Chapter 2: Review of exoskeletons for medical and service applications: ongoing research in Europe on wearable robots, with focus on lower extremity exoskeletons Chapter 3: Soft wearable robots Chapter 4: Exploring user requirements for a lower body soft exoskeleton to assist mobility Section 2: Design and control of exoskeletons Chapter 5: Design and control of spherical shoulder exoskeletons for assistive applications Chapter 6: Calibration platform for wearable 3D motion sensors Chapter 7: Control and performance of upper- and lower extremity SEA-based exoskeletons Chapter 8: Gait-event-based synchronization and control of a compact portable knee-ankle-foot exoskeleton robot for gait rehabilitation Section 3: Devices Chapter 9: Real-time gait planning for a lower limb exoskeleton robot Chapter 10: Soft wearable assistive robotics: exosuits and supernumerary limbs Chapter 11: Walking assistive apparatus for gait training patients and promotion exercise of the elderly Section 4: Commercialization issues Chapter 12: Regulatory issues for exoskeletons Chapter 13: Test methods for exoskeletons - lessons learned from industrial and response robotics Chapter 14: Ekso BionicsReviewsAuthor InformationShaoping Bai is an Associate Professor at the Department of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, Aalborg University, Denmark. His research interests include dynamics and design, assistive exoskeletons, parallel manipulators, and walking robots. He holds a Ph.D. degree in Robotics from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Gurvinder Singh Virk is Technical Director at InnotecUK involved in designing and commercialising specialised robotic systems for hazardous environments and service robots for healthcare. His current interests are in wearable exoskeletons; climbing and walking robots, and robot safety standardisation. He has been awarded the Freedom of the City of London for his work and holds a PhD in Control theory from Imperial College, University of London, UK. He has held Professorship positions at several universities in UK, New Zealand, Germany, China, India and Sweden. Thomas Sugar is Professor in the Department of Engineering, The Polytechnic School, Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, Arizona State University, USA. He works in the areas of wearable robotics for rehabilitation, gait assistance and enhanced mobility. He holds a PhD in Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics from the University of Pennsylvania, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |