You never know where great ideas are going to come from, and last month's meeting of Northeastern University's Entretech Forum provided a great example. Amongst presentations about various conventional robots (is that a new oxymoron - "conventional robots?") from firms like Hocoma , Foster-Miller and others, a voice comes along with an entirely different point of view. Barry A. Trimmer, Ph.D. and Professor of Biology at Tufts University - asks a very simple question, "why can't a robot move like a caterpillar?" Many of the challenges for robots in their ability to move around corners, up and down stairs, and generally over and around obstacles stem from the fact that they have been designed to move like people or cars, using legs or wheels. But with the clarity that's only available to someone with a little bit of distance from the problem, and expertise in an entirely different subject matter, Professor Trimmer points out that the majority of our knowledge about movement is based on creatures that walk, fly or swim using rigid articulated bones and exoskeletons. And those systems of rigid structures and joints present limitations in terms of three-dimensional movement, especially in confined or irregular spaces. With a soft-body, joints do not restrict movements. Such animals can crumple, compress and rotate body parts with virtually unlimited freedom. As a biologist, Professor Trimmer studies these creatures, and the neural systems that allow them to control movement - a subject he calls, "neural processes that organize sensory and motor information."
The interesting inspiration however, was to apply this field of biology to the engineering challenges inherent to robotics - and create the multi-disciplinary field of neuromechanics, and to launch a new research group called the Tufts Biomimetic Devices Laboratory. The lab's overall goal is to develop devices based on the highly adaptive mechanisms of animal movement, through interdisciplinary projects combining faculty from Biology, Biomedical Engineering, Computer Science/Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Psychology and Math. Now that's a cross-functional team!
There's a lesson in here that's not just about robots, but applies to product development, innovation and the search for creative solutions. Our conventional instincts are to dig deeper and deeper into a subject to acquire "domain expertise", consulting experts with deep, but narrow fields of vision. Sometimes, the best thing you can do is go outside your obvious frame of reference. Get a new perspective through consultation and interaction with an entirely different group of people. Are you searching for creative solutions and fresh ideas? Have you tried hiring smart people from different industries? Do you only read about new ideas and technologies from within your own industry? Sometimes the worst thing you can do is to spend your time locked in a single point of view - with trade journals and analyst reports that all reinforce a common set of assumptions. There's an old joke about scientists who study a single problem, learning more and more about less and less until they know everything about nothing. Is that happening to you?
Start unleashing the power of your products and platforms today.
MIDIOR is a professional services firm offering consulting, technology and data services that unleash the power of your products and platforms.
info@midior.com
(617) 864-8813
Copyright 2025 © MIDIOR Consulting | Privacy Policy