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A quadriplegic man has had his right arm and hand brought back to life with the help of thought-control technology.
Bill Kochevar, 56, was paralysed below his shoulders in a cycling accident eight years ago but can now grasp and lift objects after having two pill-sized electrodes implanted in his brain.
news.sky.com...
Kochevar had electrodes record the activity of brain neurons to generate signals that tell another device to stimulate muscles in the paralysed limb.
During trials held at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, Mr Kochevar raised a mug of water to his lips and drank from a straw.
Mr Kochevar was fitted with a mobile support, which he also controls with his brain, to counterbalance the force of gravity.
The 56-year-old told researchers he was able to control the muscle activation system "without having to really concentrate hard at it".
originally posted by: rickymouse
Sounds good but I bet that whole system is really expensive. Out of the reach of most of us. I don't think I would even want it, knowing how much it cost and how much the maintenance and training costs were. I don't think that health insurance should pay for that kind of stuff, all of our rates will go so high that we won't be able to even afford healthcare.
originally posted by: Annee
originally posted by: rickymouse
Sounds good but I bet that whole system is really expensive. Out of the reach of most of us. I don't think I would even want it, knowing how much it cost and how much the maintenance and training costs were. I don't think that health insurance should pay for that kind of stuff, all of our rates will go so high that we won't be able to even afford healthcare.
Gotta start somewhere.
Prototypes are always expensive.
originally posted by: seasonal
a reply to: rickymouse
I hope the finished product would be a "hat" to pick up brain signals and a glove-wrist band to manipulate muscles. Maybe an app for a cell phone to assist in control?
originally posted by: seasonal
a reply to: rickymouse
Nice, the potential is endless.
originally posted by: rickymouse
My mother got around all right with one mostly paralyzed arm and a leg brace from the stroke she had. She was in a wheel chair for fifteen years and she managed.
originally posted by: Annee
originally posted by: rickymouse
My mother got around all right with one mostly paralyzed arm and a leg brace from the stroke she had. She was in a wheel chair for fifteen years and she managed.
My mom was a polio victim in the '51 epidemic.
But, quad means you can't even feed yourself.
To have one arm for even that much independence is something.
originally posted by: anonentity
a reply to: rickymouse
I heard of one where electrodes were placed on the fingers of a comatose patient , then the shocks were given. The electrons go up the nerve, and become accumulative at the nerve end where the break is, thus causing a negative charge to build up, which stimulates cell growth in the nerve so it forms a bridge and joins up the break. It might be the same thing that causes a Salamander to regrow its tail, as it seems they have a negative charge where the tail is shed. Where if we loose a limb we have a positive charge on the stump.