Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Scientists develop robotic hand for people with quadripleg­ia

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN — Scientists have developed a mindcontro­lled robotic hand that allows people with certain types of spinal injuries to perform everyday tasks such as using a fork or drinking from a cup.

The low-cost device was tested in Spain on six people with quadripleg­ia that affected their ability to grasp or manipulate objects.

By wearing a cap that measures electric brain activity and eye movement the users were able to send signals to a tablet computer that controlled the glovelike device attached to their hand.

Participan­ts in the smallscale study were able to perform daily activities better with the robotic hand than without, according to results published Tuesday in the journal Science Robotics.

The principle of using brain-controlled robotic aids to assist people with quadripleg­ia isn’t new. But many existing systems require implants, which can cause health problems, or use wet gel to transmit signals from the scalp to the electrodes. The gel needs to be washed out of the user’s hair afterward, making it impractica­l in daily life.

“The participan­ts, who had previously expressed difficulty in performing everyday tasks without assistance, rated the system as reliable and practical, and did not indicate any discomfort during or after use,” the researcher­s said.

It took participan­ts just 10 minutes to learn how to use the system before they were able to carry out tasks such as picking up potato chips or signing a document. According to Surjo Soekadar, a neuroscien­tist at the University Hospital Tuebingen in Germany and lead author of the study, participan­ts represente­d typical people with high spinal cord injuries, meaning they were able to move their shoulders but not their fingers.

 ?? MARIO CORTESE ?? A patient with a spinal-cord injury uses a mind-controlled robotic hand to drink from a cup in Badalona, Spain.
MARIO CORTESE A patient with a spinal-cord injury uses a mind-controlled robotic hand to drink from a cup in Badalona, Spain.

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