posted on 2021-10-28, 11:28authored bySimona Crea, Philipp Beckerle, Michiel P. de Looze, Kevin De Pauw, Lorenzo Grazi, Tjaša Kermavnar, Jawad Masood, Leonard O'SullivanLeonard O'Sullivan, Ilaria Pacifico, Carlos Rodriguez-Guerrero, Nicola Vitiello, Danijela Ristić-Durrant, Jan Veneman
The large-scale adoption of occupational exoskeletons (OEs) will only happen if clear evidence of effectiveness of the
devices is available. Performing product-specific field validation studies would allow the stakeholders and decision makers (e.g., employers, ergonomists, health, and safety departments) to assess OEs’ effectiveness in their specific
work contexts and with experienced workers, who could further provide useful insights on practical issues related to
exoskeleton daily use. This paper reviews present-day scientific methods for assessing the effectiveness of OEs in
laboratory and field studies, and presents the vision of the authors on a roadmap that could lead to large-scale adoption
of this technology. The analysis of the state-of-the-art shows methodological differences between laboratory and field
studies. While the former are more extensively reported in scientific papers, they exhibit limited generalizability of the
findings to real-world scenarios. On the contrary, field studies are limited in sample sizes and frequently focused only
on subjective metrics. We propose a roadmap to promote large-scale knowledge-based adoption of OEs. It details that
the analysis of the costs and benefits of this technology should be communicated to all stakeholders to facilitate
informed decision making, so that each stakeholder can develop their specific role regarding this innovation. Large scale field studies can help identify and monitor the possible side-effects related to exoskeleton use in real work
situations, as well as provide a comprehensive scientific knowledge base to support the revision of ergonomics risk assessment methods, safety standards and regulations, and the definition of guidelines and practices for the selection
and use of OEs.
Funding
Development of theoretical and experimental criteria for predicting the wear resistance of austenitic steels and nanostructured coatings based on a hard alloy under conditions of erosion-corrosion wear