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![]() Virtual Reality is finding a surprising application in rehab, as a team of engineers at Arizona State University will soon be using an Oculus Rift headset to Help tune Prosthetic arms. The problem the investigators are addressing is training the brain to consider a Virtual arm, used to develop actual Prosthetic interfaces, as part of the body. There’s a neural feedback loop that links feelings, decisions, and actions taken, and seeing a Virtual arm react as though a real one does can go a long way to making programming easier.The high definition of Control of a Virtual arm is possible in the first place thanks to Arizona State’s recently developed array of 96 microelectrodes that are implanted at the median and ulnar nerves, and can, if programmed accurately, provide a very high degree of resolution when controlling an upper arm prosthetic. Some details from FULLCIRCLE, ASU’s engineering publication: “We’re **w at the stage in this process where we ask patients to mirror movements between hands,” explains [associate professor of biomedical engineering Bradley] Greger. “We can’t record what the*amputated hand is doing, but we can record what a healthy hand is doing.” So, for instance, asking the patient to wave both hands simultaneously, or to point at an object with both hands, will be integral to the latest tech employed in the feedback loop: an Oculus Rift Virtual Reality headset.Here you can see a Virtual arm being controlled via electrodes implanted in an amputee: Study in Journal of Neural Engineering: Restoring motor control and sensory feedback in people with upper extremity amputations using arrays of 96 microelectrodes implanted in the median and ulnar nerves… Via:*FULLCIRCLE… This post Virtual Reality to Help Control Prosthetic Arms appeared first on Medgadget. ??????? ??????: Virtual Reality to Help Control Prosthetic Arms || ??????: rss || ??????: اسم منتداك
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