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Humanoids Grow a Spine: The Effect of Lateral Spinal Motion on the Mechanical Energy Efficiency

Jimmy Or

Year
2012
Citations
15

Abstract

Recently, there has been a growing interest in the energy efficiency of bipedal walking robots. However, there has been no study of the effect of the spine on the overall energy consumption of robots during locomotion. This article investigates the energy efficiency of a simulated biped humanoid robot that is capable of walking with spinal motion. A systematic technique is presented to compare the energy efficiency of a robot walking with different styles of spinal movement. Simulation results show that with the additional degrees of freedom (DoF) in the torso, the humanoid robot requires 26.5% less energy than its conventional rigid-torso counterpart to complete the same walking task. Interestingly, this happens when the robot is walking with swaying hips.

Keywords

TorsoHumanoid robotRobotSimulationEfficient energy useMotion (physics)Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)Computer scienceEnergy consumptionEnergy (signal processing)

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