Thanks to a bionic finger, an amputee patient feels textures again
An amputee was able to perceive and distinguish smooth and rough textures in real time thanks to an artificial finger surgically connected to nerves in the upper part of his arm. This advance will speed up the development of sense of touch in prosthetic limbs.
An amputee was able to perceive and distinguish smooth and rough textures in real time thanks to an artificial finger surgically connected to nerves in the upper part of his arm. This advance will speed up the development of sense of touch in prosthetic limbs.
The nerves of non-amputee persons can be stimulated in the same way to feel roughness, without surgery, which proves that prosthetic touch sensors for amputees can be tested quite safely on able-bodied people.
The technology used was developed by Silvestro Micera and his team at EPFL (Switzerland) and SSSA (Italy) in collaboration with Calogero Oddo and his team at SSSA. The results, published in eLife open new windows on the development of bionic prostheses, improved by sensory perception.
“The stimulus had almost the same effect as would I feel with my hand," explained Dennis Aabo Sørensen, a hand amputee, about the finger connected to his stump. He continued: “I still feel my missing hand as if I have a closed fist. I...