Date |
12/31/2022 |
|
|
Publishing company |
NIH News in Health |
|
|
Title |
Bionic Movement |
|
|
Summary |
This article explains how to feel sensations through a prosthetic arm. In the past, many prosthetic arms were just scrap metal, but as technology advances, researchers are working on ways to give people "feelings" through prosthetics. This article introduces two methods that can help people with bionic devices feel like using their natural limbs. The first is "the use of sensory nerves." When a person's arm is amputated, it is formed in the shape of a stump. At this time, Move the remaining sensory nerves from the transmitted arm to the skin of the upper arm; sensory nerves are placed on the skin. And then, by using a small robot, which can make hand press the skin on the upper arm when it touches something, and this way people can artificially send sensory signals to your brain. By using this, it can be made to feel the same sensation as using a real arm rather than a prosthetic arm. The second method is "use of vibration". This method uses a computer and a small robot to trick the brain by sending vibrations to the muscles. When the prosthetic arm grabs something, it sends that information to a computer control system outside the body, which instructs a small robot attached to the arm to vibrate the arm muscles based on that information. This generates various vibrations according to the strength of the force holding the object and transmits the generated vibrations to the depth of the muscles, and it might sense an actual muscle moving. |
|
|
My thought |
*An estimated 185,000 people undergo amputation procedures in the US every year |
|
|
Want to know more |
1. I want to know more deeper how can we feel something 2. Peripheral nervous system |
||
Work cite
*Zhang, A. “One Step Closer to Cyborgs: The Development of Artificial Nerves.” Science in the News, 13 Aug. 2018, https://sitn.hms.harvard.edu/flash/2018/artificial-nerves/#:~:text=An%20artificial%20sensory%20nerve%20consists,(analogous%20to%20the%20brain).
*Thielking, Megan. “Scientists Trick the Brain into Sensing the Movement of a Prosthetic.” STAT, 15 Mar. 2018, https://www.statnews.com/2018/03/15/prosthetics-movement/.