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The combination of artificial intelligence and neuroscience allows a paralyzed man to manipulate a robotic arm by using his brain to imagine movements.
One of the study’s participants, who lost his ability to move and speak many years ago by a stroke, moves the robotic arm simply by imagining the movements in his head. Location, location, location.
Soon, a flexible octopus-like robot could be completely free of wires or internal electronics. Engineers at Rice University have unveiled a new soft robotic arm controlled by laser beams.
A sensor-equipped computer program can accurately identify and count arm movements in people participating in stroke rehabilitation, a new study shows. Now that it can do so, the next step, say ...
Get Instant Summarized Text (Gist) Older adults exhibit significantly slower arm movements when reacting to slips, increasing their risk of falling sideways, which is closely linked to hip fractures.
A sensor-equipped computer program was nearly 80% effective in identifying and counting arm movements in patients undergoing stroke rehabilitation, researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine ...
Two people with upper body paralysis caused by stroke partially regained arm movements after receiving electrical stimulation of neurons in their spinal cord. By Grace Wade.