Thursday, October 6, 2011
7:47 PM
Labels: Monkey , News update
By PRESS ASSOCIATION REPORTER
Two rhesus monkeys learned to operate a virtual arm with their brain power - It was the first ever demonstration of a primate brain operating a machine
Monkeys have been trained to move and feel virtual objects using thought alone in a scientific breakthrough that could help paralysed patients.
Two rhesus monkeys learned to operate a virtual arm with their brain power and were able to differentiate between the textures of virtual objects.
It is hoped this could pave the way for the development of a "robotic exoskeleton" to be worn by severely paralysed people, helping them move and experience the world around them using brainwaves, the senior author of the American study said.
Without moving any part of their real bodies the two monkeys used their electrical brain activity to direct the virtual hands of a computer character
Miguel Nicolelis, co-director of the Duke University Centre for Neuroengineering in Durham, North Carolina, said: "Someday in the near future, quadriplegic patients will take advantage of this technology not only to move their arms and hands and to walk again, but also to sense the texture of objects placed in their hands, or experience the nuances of the terrain on which they stroll with the help of a wearable robotic exoskeleton."
The virtual hands were then used to explore the surface of three virtual objects
The electrical brain activity of the two rhesus monkeys trained at the centre was used to direct the hands of a virtual monkey shown on a screen - without them moving any part of their real bodies.
The virtual hands were then used to explore the surface of three virtual objects, which looked the same but had been designed to have different textures, which were expressed as tiny electrical signals sent back to the monkeys' brains.
It is hoped this could pave the way for the development of a 'robotic exoskeleton' to be worn by severely paralysed people (picture posed by model)
Professor Nicolelis added: "The remarkable success with non-human primates is what makes us believe that humans could accomplish the same task much more easily in the near future."
The monkeys taught to use the virtual arm were rhesus monkeys (library image of that species)
source: dailymail
Two rhesus monkeys learned to operate a virtual arm with their brain power - It was the first ever demonstration of a primate brain operating a machine
Monkeys have been trained to move and feel virtual objects using thought alone in a scientific breakthrough that could help paralysed patients.
Two rhesus monkeys learned to operate a virtual arm with their brain power and were able to differentiate between the textures of virtual objects.
It is hoped this could pave the way for the development of a "robotic exoskeleton" to be worn by severely paralysed people, helping them move and experience the world around them using brainwaves, the senior author of the American study said.
Without moving any part of their real bodies the two monkeys used their electrical brain activity to direct the virtual hands of a computer character
Miguel Nicolelis, co-director of the Duke University Centre for Neuroengineering in Durham, North Carolina, said: "Someday in the near future, quadriplegic patients will take advantage of this technology not only to move their arms and hands and to walk again, but also to sense the texture of objects placed in their hands, or experience the nuances of the terrain on which they stroll with the help of a wearable robotic exoskeleton."
The virtual hands were then used to explore the surface of three virtual objects
The electrical brain activity of the two rhesus monkeys trained at the centre was used to direct the hands of a virtual monkey shown on a screen - without them moving any part of their real bodies.
The virtual hands were then used to explore the surface of three virtual objects, which looked the same but had been designed to have different textures, which were expressed as tiny electrical signals sent back to the monkeys' brains.
It is hoped this could pave the way for the development of a 'robotic exoskeleton' to be worn by severely paralysed people (picture posed by model)
Professor Nicolelis added: "The remarkable success with non-human primates is what makes us believe that humans could accomplish the same task much more easily in the near future."
The monkeys taught to use the virtual arm were rhesus monkeys (library image of that species)
source: dailymail
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