Prosthetics that restore people's "senses": here we are
Scientists have developed prostheses that 'feel', giving amputees a more natural sensation when walking.
Scientists have developed prostheses that 'feel', giving amputees a more natural sensation when walking.
I don't know if it moved the web, but it moved me. In this "class project" there is all the sense of the future: unity in creativity.
A simple, lightweight breathing-guided device offers an alternative option to traditional hand prosthetics
Amputees who find mobility and the possibility (for everyone) to control objects with their thoughts: bionic body parts are a reality. As tangible as it is risky.
Steve Verze became the first man in the world to be gifted with a 3D printed eye
Many teams work on improving prostheses for those who have had an amputation. A new approach also works on how to prepare the body. And the results are very promising.
He was disfigured at age 14: today Evgeny Nekrasov sleeps 2 hours a night, has an illegally implanted chip and is a transhumanist reference in Russia.
The device, developed with a new rapid prototyping technique that allows to cut costs and times, can help almost 12 million people amputate worldwide
Researchers at the University of San Francisco have developed a neural interface that allows patients without the use of words to "speak" through the device.
As we've reported on DARPA's robotic arm over the last 5 years...