An 'Avatar' experiment to help paralysed people move?
The findings could help create robotic devices that begin to merge human and machine in order to assist human locomotion.

The findings could help create robotic devices that begin to merge human and machine in order to assist human locomotion.
"We tried to build locomotion from the bottom up by starting with a single muscle-tendon unit, the basic power source for locomotion in all things that move," explained Greg Sawicki, associate professor at North Carolina State University.
The team connected the muscle-tendon unit to a motor inside a custom robotic interface designed to simulate what the muscle-tendon unit "feels" inside the leg.
"We then electrically stimulated the muscle to get contractions going on the benchtop," Sawicki added.
The researchers showed that resonance tuning is a likely mechanism behind springy leg behaviour during locomotion.
In locomotion, resonance comes from tuning the interaction between the nervous system and the leg so they work together.
"It turns out that if I know the mass, leverage and stiffness of a muscle-tendon unit, I can tell you exactly how often I should stimulate it to get resonance in the form of spring-like, elastic behaviour," Sawicki informed.
The findings have design implications relevant to designing exoskeletons for able-bodied individuals, as well as exoskeleton or prosthetic systems for people with mobility impairments.
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