Call & Times

GETTING A GRIP

AI-powered bionic hand promises lifelike dexterity

- DO UR , SD

Engineers at BrainRobot­ics have created a next-generation prosthetic that’s meant to be more mobile and affordable than other robotic limbs used today. It’s a hand powered by artificial intelligen­ce that gives amputees precise control over each finger, enabling them to perform numerous gestures and grips.

The hand is undergoing FDA testing, and this month the company is testing the technology with the people it is intended to help.

In today’s world of brain-powered bionic limbs, highly functionin­g prosthetic­s are too expensive to reach many people who could benefit from them, researcher­s in the field say. The BrainRobot­ics device seeks to be the answer to that, with prices expected to start 30 lower than what’s on the market right now.

What primarily sets BrainRobot­ics’ prosthetic apart from those on the market is its algorithm, which detects minute muscle signals, converts them into hand movements and learns over time.

“The innovation is in the algorithm. It’s in the software,” said Max Newlon, CEO of BrainRobot­ics, a subsidiary of BrainCo. “The innovation that gives our users this really precise, lifelike control is what sets us apart.”

The company was born out of Harvard’s Innovation Lab. Initially, it sought to control artificial limbs via brain signals but later found that measuring muscle signals was far more reliable, Newlon said.

Researcher­s developed the device for people such as Carey Duval, an Army captain who lost his

right hand in Afghanista­n. He began testing the prosthetic in early December, spending a few weeks training to use the device proficient­ly. The robotic hand enabled him to complete activities such as playing -enga and opening a water bottle with relative ease.

Other prosthetic­s without the BrainRobot­ics algorithm or as many grips made those tasks difficult to achieve, he said.

“I could flex inside the prosthetic, and it would change from a finger point to a two-finger pinch, and then from a pinch to a fist,” Duval said. “I could control a computer mouse and work a keyboard for the first time in a long time. I haven’t played a computer game in six years.”

Roughly 2 million Americans live with the loss of a limb, half a million of which are without upper limbs. Those seeking artificial hands have faced a landscape of static options offering limited functional­ity for years. Meanwhile, many of the robotic limbs that have cropped up either have physical buttons or require shaking to activate. They provide a limited number of finger motions, allowing wearers to switch between predetermi­ned gestures.

The BrainRobot­ics hand prosthesis connects to a smartphone app via Bluetooth, maintains a charge throughout the day and can be programmed within a few minutes, the company says.

The hand is made using aluminum and plastic. To set it up, amputees are instructed to “think” about moving individual fingers and making hand gestures while the prosthetic is attached. Meanwhile, the device measures and remembers what each signal looks like. It’s ready to operate within 15 minutes, the company says. After training, the robotic hand will

D respond to each of the muscle triggers it picked up during the exercise. So in practice, it can intuitivel­y perform the users’ intended motions and gestures and become more lifelike over time.

BrainRobot­ics developed two versions of the hand A two-channel prosthetic with two sensors attached to the wearer’s limb and a higher-functionin­g eight-channel prosthetic with eight sensors.

The company’s two-channel device enables up to 2 hand movements and is undergoing F A testing, which it expects will be completed within the first quarter of 2021. Its eight-channel device with unlimited combinatio­ns of hand movements is next in the pipeline.

3rices are expected to start at about 1 ,000, or at least 0 lower than what’s currently on the market. Comparable prosthetic­s can cost 20,000 to 0,0000 per unit. Other bionic limbs that function similarly but look more like a human hand can cost up to 100,000.

The company works with prosthetic centers to get their technology to people like Carey, who is medically retiring from the Army.

 ?? BrainRobot­ics ?? Army Capt. Carey Duval tests a hand powered by artificial intelligen­ce that gives amputees precise control over each finger, enabling them to perform numerous gestures and grips.
BrainRobot­ics Army Capt. Carey Duval tests a hand powered by artificial intelligen­ce that gives amputees precise control over each finger, enabling them to perform numerous gestures and grips.
 ?? BrainRobot­ics. ?? Duval tries out the hand during a meal.
BrainRobot­ics. Duval tries out the hand during a meal.

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