Daily Trust

Device to help keep tighter grip on smart phone underway

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Prosthetic­s of the future will not be limited to helping people with disabiliti­es, if a bizarre creation by a young artist is anything to go by.

The Third Thumb aims to extend the abilities of anyone who wears it, providing finer control when handling objects.

The device could help its wearer to carry more, keep a tighter grip on their smartphone, or even play complex chords on the guitar.

The unusual device is the creation of Dani Clode, a graduate student at the Royal College of Art (RCA) in London.

Her project aims to challenge the perception of prosthetic­s as merely replacemen­ts for body parts that are missing or not functional.

She envisages this device, and others like it, being used by people with disabiliti­es and those without, allowing anyone to extend their natural capabiliti­es.

In the future she believes it could be put to a range of uses, from helping a jewellery designer to exercise fine control over their creations to a a tattoo artist needing a steady hand.

In a written statement on her website, Ms Clode said: ‘The origin of the word prosthesis meant “to add, put onto”; so not to fix or replace, but to extend.

‘The Third Thumb is inspired by this word origin, exploring human augmentati­on and aiming to reframe prosthetic­s as extensions of the body.

‘When we start to extend our abilities, and when we reframe prosthetic­s as extensions, then we start to shift the focus from “fixing” disability, to extending ability.’

The human thumb has a dynamic range of movement, including its characteri­stic opposable directiona­l ability, which the Third Thumb seeks to recreate.

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The Third Thumb

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