'Robo-Mate' Exoskeleton Could Revolutionise Industry (Again) (PICTURES)

'Robo-Mate' Exoskeleton Could Revolutionise Industry (Again)

Amazing-looking exoskeletons are one of those inventions which turn up fairly regularly around these parts.

In recent months we've have a Harvard-made suit that can make you three times as strong, and a Nasa-designed version aimed at making astronauts healthier in space.

Now the Europeans are getting involved, reports the BBC, with this early concept design for an exo-skeleton designed for use in industry.

The 'Robo-Mate' is designed to be "a user-friendly intelligent cooperative light weight wearable human-robotic exoskeleton for manual handling work".

"Direct physical interaction using haptic technologies will be combined with perception enhancement using cognitive science programming paradigms to drive the exoskeleton, thus not requiring any programming skills from its users.

Robo-Mate shall increase both efficiency and safety of manual production processes in industrial environments. This shall increase the productivity of companies and lower the currently high costs induced by musculoskeletal disorders."

In other words, the suit is a new way to reduce work-place injuries - though they admit they would have to convince people it won't just lead to different, more terrifying injuries of its own.

Now the EU has committed £3.8 million to the project in order to iron out some early issues.

Experts are scpetical, but say the essential idea is practical in essence.

"At the minute the motors or hydraulic systems required tend to be rather large and clumsy," Prof Darwin Caldwell, from King's College London, told the BBC.

"What we have to do is find ways to miniaturise those. What we also have to remember is that an exoskeleton is essentially a robot in physical contact with a human."

The project is in its first month of a three-year plan, so don't expect results immediately. But it's an intriguing glimpse to where we could be in 20 to 30 years time.

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