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Origami-Inspired Robot Could Help In Surgeries

The origami inspired TWISTER robot has the potential to be used in manufacturing, surgery, and even space.
Greg Lee
The origami inspired TWISTER robot has the potential to be used in manufacturing, surgery, and even space.

What started as a “fun hobby project” based on a love of origami may turn into a device with the potential to work in manufacturing, surgery, and even in space.

Kiju Lee, an assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Case Western Reserve University is the principal investigator for a project called TWISTER, short for TWISted TowEr Robot.

This semi-soft robot is able to grasp and work with various materials without exerting significant pressure on the object.

Lee says their initial focus was on surgical applications.

“So this unique mechanism can offer additional degree freedom that can be used for kind of mimicking the surgeon’s wrist so that it can provide a better performance when it is used in a very tight and harsh environment such as the human body,” Lee said.

Lee recently began to develop 3-D printed versions of the robot and has plans for various sized prototypes in the near future.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngL2m0G3OME

Brooke is a senior journalism major and photojournalism minor. She has experience in photography, multimedia, print, radio and visual journalism. She has worked with Kent State student media including The Kent Stater and KentWired. She is a disc jockey and the former web director for Black Squirrel Radio. She is currently the general manager of Black Squirrel Radio.