While Robocop and Iron Man can dodge bullets and crush villains, a new powered suit from Japan promises its elderly users more modest powers, such as pulling up radishes without getting a backache.
Unlike its heavily armed Hollywood counterparts, the Power Assist Suit aims to make life easier for Japan’s army of graying farmers.
The metal-and-plastic exoskeleton boasts eight electric motors that amplify the strength of the wearer’s arms and legs, as well as sensors that can detect movements and respond to commands through a voice-recognition system.
The power-enhancing suit was developed by professor Shigeki Toyama and his team at the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology. Toyama plans to set up a company to start producing the futuristic outfit by the end of the year.
“If the farmer bends over to grasp a radish, his back will be firmly supported,” said Gohei Yamamoto, one of the students working on the team, as he recently demonstrated the suit on his university campus.
“A brief vocal instruction will instantly straighten the rods along his legs, giving him the power he needs to pull the vegetable without effort,” he said.
Fifteen years in the making, the robo-suit will soon hit the market in Japan to help aging farmers harvest their fruit and vegetables while avoiding backaches and nasty cramps, its developers say.
Japan, with a low birthrate and a high life expectancy, is facing a demographic crisis as its population rapidly ages and shrinks.
Industrial robots have long been common in Japan, and robo-suits are making inroads in hospitals and retirement homes, where they can help carers lift patients or aid in physical rehabilitation exercises. But with two-thirds of the nation’s farm workers already over 65 years old, the agriculture sector is a potentially lucrative untapped market.
The suit should hit the Japanese market in 2012, when it will initially retail for about ¥1 million (US$10,700), a price tag its makers hope to halve if the device is mass-produced, the team said.
There are, however, no plans so far to sell the suits overseas.
“I doubt that the suit would sell in Europe and in America, where foreign migrant workers often perform farm-related tasks,” Toyama said.
The team has developed a heavy-duty 30kg model for lifting big loads and pulling vegetables out of the ground, and a 23kg version designed for lighter tasks such as picking grapes.
The robo-suits can reduce the user’s physical effort by 62 percent on average, the inventors say. When bending knees, the muscular activity is reduced by half, and the suit can also take most of the strain out of crouching.
“We conducted a survey of 102 people for the latest model, asking what part of the body hurt when they picked grapes,” Yamamoto said. “Most farmers complained about aches in their arms, necks and lower backs.”
The suits are already tough, but soon they will also become smarter.
By the end of the year Toyama plans to start working on augmented reality goggles on which useful information could be displayed for the farmer, in much the same way as data is projected onto the inside of a fighter jet’s cockpit.
Useful information might include how ripe the grapes are, or the user’s heart rate and calorie consumption, Toyama said.



