Wollesen Bettina, Gräf Julia, Hansen Lasse, Gurevich Anna, Elprama Shirley A, Argubi-Wollesen Andreas, De Pauw Kevin
Institute of Human Movement Science, Department of Human Movement and Exercise Science, Universitaet Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Institute of Movement Therapy and Movement-Oriented Prevention and Rehabilitation; German Sports University Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Front Neurol. 2024 Oct 18;15:1401937. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2024.1401937. eCollection 2024.
Upper limb exoskeletons are recommended to alleviate muscle fatigue, particularly in working conditions inducing musculoskeletal discomfort like overhead work. However, wearing an exoskeleton might introduce cognitive-motor interference, affecting performance. Understanding its neural impact and potential gender differences in design effects is crucial. Therefore, the aim of this study is to examine exoskeleton effects addressing cross-gender comparisons, and exploring the impact on cognitive and physical workload in real-world scenarios. The research questions address the impact of exoskeleton use on muscle synergies, upper body posture, cognitive resources, comfort/discomfort, acceptance and usability.
The cross-sectional study integrates a multifactorial mixed-measure design. Participants are grouped by gender (female vs. male) and working condition (with vs. without exoskeleton). Motor performance and underlying neuronal correlates (fNIRS) will be analyzed. Based on an sample size calculation, 80 participants (40 female/40 male) will be recruited. Working performance will be assessed by 1. Physical Performance Task (PILE task) and 2. Precision Task (following the Fitts paradigm), while body postures will be monitored with an Xsens motion capture system. Brain activation will be captured with an fNIRS system comprising 32 active optodes. Postural comfort/discomfort, acceptance, and usability will be reported via standardized questionnaires.
The study will gain insights into potential gender differences in exoskeleton use and will contribute to designing and optimizing the implementation of exoskeletons by considering muscle synergies, movement variability and cognitive resource allocation. Additionally, the study also highlights user discomfort, a crucial factor that could impede widespread adoption, particularly among females, in real-world scenarios.
推荐使用上肢外骨骼来缓解肌肉疲劳,尤其是在诸如高空作业等会引起肌肉骨骼不适的工作条件下。然而,穿戴外骨骼可能会产生认知 - 运动干扰,影响工作表现。了解其神经影响以及设计效果中潜在的性别差异至关重要。因此,本研究的目的是通过跨性别比较来检验外骨骼的效果,并探索其在实际场景中对认知和身体工作量的影响。研究问题涉及外骨骼使用对肌肉协同作用、上身姿势、认知资源、舒适/不适、接受度和可用性的影响。
这项横断面研究采用多因素混合测量设计。参与者按性别(女性与男性)和工作条件(使用外骨骼与不使用外骨骼)分组。将分析运动表现和潜在的神经元相关性(功能近红外光谱技术,fNIRS)。根据样本量计算,将招募80名参与者(40名女性/40名男性)。工作表现将通过1. 身体表现任务(PILE任务)和2. 精确任务(遵循菲茨范式)进行评估,而身体姿势将使用Xsens运动捕捉系统进行监测。大脑激活将通过一个包含32个有源光探测器的fNIRS系统进行捕捉。姿势舒适/不适、接受度和可用性将通过标准化问卷进行报告。
该研究将深入了解外骨骼使用中潜在的性别差异,并通过考虑肌肉协同作用、运动变异性和认知资源分配,为外骨骼的设计和优化实施做出贡献。此外,该研究还突出了用户不适这一关键因素,在实际场景中它可能会阻碍外骨骼的广泛应用,尤其是在女性中。