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HOME | US EDITION | SCIENCE |
June 5, 1999
COLUMNISTS
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Professor And Former Graduate Student Create All-Terrain Wheelchair![]() Apoorva Mandavilli in New York
Because in that same park, just a few feet away, Dr Vijay Kumar, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Pennsylvania, was idly strolling with his wife, Maneesha. As he watched the man in the wheelchair, Dr Kumar, thought, "Wouldn't it be great if the chair could walk like people can?"
But people bound to wheelchairs are still denied the pleasures of beaches, parks and gardens and can often be deterred by a small, seemingly insurmountable obstacle. "It wasn't clear that a walking chair would do the job," said Dr Kumar who set to work on the 'all-terrain' wheelchair soon after that spring day. Instead, he wanted to design "a wheelchair with crutches to hoist up over obstacles." A couple of months ago, Dr Kumar, 37, and his former graduate student, Dr Venkat Krovi, announced the functional prototype of a wheelchair that can climb stairs, navigate grassy surfaces and clear obstacles. The wheelchair in question is essentially a conventional wheelchair fitted with two extra limbs. The extra set of arms can climb over curbs and step over obstacles in the path of the user. They can also be used to open doors and to pick up objects.
To climb a stair, the arms, like crutches, first anchor the chair on a step or other obstacle. The motors enable the arms to pull the wheelchair up and over the obstacle. The arms then rotate behind the chair to push the rear end of the vehicle. The wheelchair is designed such that the arms are set in motion only when they encounter a challenge such as potholes, rocks or other obstacles and to navigate sandy beaches and grassy lawns where conventional wheelchairs are inadequate. On ordinary surfaces, the vehicle functions like a conventional wheelchair. Ideally, the arms could also be used to help the user mount and dismount the chair, so that they have a greater degree of independence in their movements. Dr Kumar is associated with University of Pennsylvania's General Robotics Automation Sensing and Perception Center. At GRASP, nearly 50 scientists from the physical and biological sciences study locomotion -- or movement. By studying the motion of insects and goats, the scientists design machines that can walk as skilfully as goats or spiders do.
The model, designed on a shoestring budget, can only support a maximum weight of 60 lbs (Dr Kumar's five-year-old daughter, Priya, tested the model). For adults, the model can be scaled up using bigger motors. Dr Kumar is surprised by the amount of attention the wheelchair has attracted. But what would be even more welcome, he said, is finance for a bigger model of the wheelchair. Although many individuals have expressed interest, he said, the wheelchair industry is fairly conservative.
"If somehow we're able to figure out how to build robots and assist people that would be a great accomplishment," he said. In fact, he continued, it would not be unreasonable in the future to have special purpose robotic servants and families with a "fleet of personal robots." Apoorva Mandavilli, a science writer, studies journalism at New York University. The Man Behind The New Wheelchair
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