TMZ.com | August 16th, 2010 | The basic difficulty with the
wheelchair’s operation and movement control has been made surpisingly
simple through the introduction of the Robotic Wheelchair, a design of
the Saitama University’s Human-Robot Interaction Center.

With this robotic wheelchair, the person sitting in the chair does not
need to operate it with his or her hands, nor does an attendant needs
to supply any physical labor to pull and push the chair for his or her
ward. Instead, the wheelchair moves automatically with the person who
is walking alongside of it. This wheelchair is programmed to respond to
the movement of the person walking with it and it can even anticipate
the way in which the person will move next.

For tracking the probable direction in which the companion will move or
turn, the robotic wheelchair has a built-in distance sensor and camera
system. These technologies help the chair to mimic the attendant by
examining their shoulder position. That means, along with being
automatic, these wheelchairs are quickly receptive as well. For this
reason, the person walking along the wheelchair, after making a turn,
will not have to wait for the chair to make a turn and then reach him
or her. Everything will be so fast it will appear to be happening at
the same time. However, for the most effective and prompt results, the
wheelchair should be kept to the left of its walking companion.

Some other advantages of using the robotic wheelchair are that the
person riding in it will not have worry about avoiding any obstacles
that come in the way. The chair is programmed to sense things,
particularly a human being coming towards it and likewise compensates,
choosing a freer path. Even more, the good news about these robotic
wheelchairs is that one companion can operate and guide two of these
wheelchairs together at the same time. This must the best feature of
these wheelchairs. It is very difficult for an attendant to manually
operate two regular wheelchairs. That demands a lot of energy,
concentration and good timing. But things are not so in case of the
robotic wheelchairs. They make the task much easier.

The robotic wheelchair, by relieving the companion from pushing and
operating the chair, has made it very easy for someone to walk along
the person sitting in the wheelchair. The person sitting in the chair
will not have to turn back or speak loudly to communicate with the
attendant pushing them, nor is that attendant required to waste his or
her energy in pushing and pulling the person in the wheelchair.

Robots are doing miraculous things, and that can be seen by viewing
other inventions such as the Lego Robot that follows you upstairs and
Giant Robot Arm that offers a person seated in a chair to experience
how it feels to drive a Ferrari.

Watch this video:









www.AstroDigi.com (Nino Guevara Ruwano)

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Posted By NINO to en.ASTRODIGI.com at 8/16/2010 08:44:00 PM

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