Litcius/Paper detail

Biomechanical changes, acceptance, and usability of a passive shoulder exoskeleton in manual material handling. A field study

Lasse Schrøder Jakobsen, Mark de Zee, Afshin Samani, Kévin Desbrosses, Pascal Madeleine

2023Applied Ergonomics28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Occupational exoskeletons contribute to diminish the biomechanical load during manual work. However, familiarization to the use of exoskeletons is rarely considered, which may lead to failure of acceptance and implementation. In this study, ten logistic workers underwent a 5-week progressive familiarization to a passive shoulder exoskeleton, while ten workers acted as controls. Tests pre and post the familiarization applied measurements of muscle activity and kinematics of back, neck, and shoulder, perceived effort, and usability-ratings of the exoskeleton. Exoskeleton use resulted in lower muscle activity of anterior deltoid (13-39%) and upper trapezius (16-60%) and reduced perceived effort. Additionally, it induced an offset in shoulder flexion and abduction during resting position (8-10°). No conclusions on familiarization could be drawn due to low adherence to the protocol. However, the emotions of the workers towards using the exoskeleton decreased making it questionable whether the shoulder exoskeleton is suitable for use in the logistics sector.

Topics & Concepts

ExoskeletonDeltoid curveUsabilityPhysical medicine and rehabilitationElectromyographyPhysical therapyWork (physics)MedicineKinematicsEngineeringHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceSurgeryMechanical engineeringPhysicsClassical mechanicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryMuscle activation and electromyography studies