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Brain-controlled bionic limbs are inching closer to reality

A recent trial tested one new integration technique, which involves surgically reconstructing muscle pairs that give recipients a sense of the position and movement of a bionic limb. Signals from those muscles control robotic joints, so the prosthesis is fully under control of the user’s brain. The system enabled people with below-knee amputations to walk more naturally and better navigate slopes, stairs and obstacles.
In an anatomics approach, bones are exploited to provide stable anchors; nerves are rerouted to create control signals for robotic limbs or transmit sensory feedback; muscles are co-opted as biological amplifiers or grafted into place to provide more signal sources. These techniques all improve the connection and communication between a robotic limb and the human nervous system, enhancing what bionic prostheses are capable of.
51 sats \ 1 reply \ @Golu 8 Oct
It would a big leap for prosthetics if comes to reality.
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It's almost done. You're right, it'll be a boon for people with disabilities.
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Amazing.
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It would be excellent for those people who have suffered accidents or who have been in wars. In fact, I have relatives who have had a leg amputated due to grade two diabetes and currently feel very depressed. One of these advances would be perfect for that type of situation.
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