Evaluating cognitive and physical work performance: A comparative study of an active and passive industrial back-support exoskeleton

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Abstract

Occupational back-support exoskeletons, categorized as active or passive, hold promise for mitigating work-related musculoskeletal disorders. However, their impact on combined physical and cognitive aspects of industrial work performance remains inadequately understood, especially regarding potential differences between exoskeleton categories. A randomized, counterbalanced cross-over study was conducted, comparing the active CrayX, passive Paexo Back, and a no exoskeleton condition. A 15-min dual task was used to simulate both cognitive and physical aspects of industrial work performance. Cognitive workload parameters included reaction time, accuracy, and subjective measures. Physical workload included movement duration, segmented in three phases: (1) walking to and grabbing the box, (2) picking up, carrying, and putting down the box, and (3) returning to the starting point. Comfort of both devices was also surveyed. The Paexo significantly increased movement duration in the first segment compared to NoExo (Paexo = 1.55 ± 0.19 s; NoExo = 1.32 ± 0.17 s; p

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APA

Govaerts, R., Turcksin, T., Vanderborght, B., Roelands, B., Meeusen, R., De Pauw, K., & De Bock, S. (2023). Evaluating cognitive and physical work performance: A comparative study of an active and passive industrial back-support exoskeleton. Wearable Technologies, 4. https://doi.org/10.1017/wtc.2023.25

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