Talk To The Hand: A New Interface For Bionic Limbs
DARPA, the Pentagonβs R&D branch, has awarded $4 million to a project led by ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Methodist University engineers to attempt to connect nerves to artificial limbs using fiber optics.
By Morgen Peck
The Six Million Dollar Manβs robotic arm worked as seamlessly as his natural one. But in the real world, robotic limbs have limited motions and the user canβt feel what he or she is βtouching.β a new approach using optical fibers implanted around nerves could transmit more data and let prosthetics speak to the brain.
Previously, scientists surgically connected electrodes to the nervous system, but they seemed to harm the bodyβs tissues, making the implant fail within months. In 2005, scientists discovered that they could stimulate a neuron to send a message by shining infrared light on it. Last September, DARPA, the Pentagonβs R&D branch, awarded $4 million to a project led by ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ Methodist University engineers to attempt to connect nerves to artificial limbs using fiber optics.
The team suspects that flexible glass or polymer fiber optics will be more flesh-friendly than rigid electrodes. In addition, optical fibers transmit several signals at once, carrying 10 times as much data as their electrical counterparts. βOur goal is to do for neural interfaces what fiber optics did for the telecom industry,β says electrical engineer Marc Christensen, who is leading the ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ group. Transmitting more information faster should give bionic limbs more lifelike movements.
This month, the team will implant optical fibers to stimulate a ratβs rear leg. If it works, Christensen says, in about a decade, robotic arms could be as graceful as Steve Austinβs six-million-dollar one.
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