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posted by hubie on Wednesday February 01 2023, @10:09AM   Printer-friendly
from the ethernet-over-spinal-cord dept.

Unused bandwidth in neurons can be tapped to control extra limbs:

What could you do with an extra limb? Consider a surgeon performing a delicate operation, one that needs her expertise and steady hands—all three of them. As her two biological hands manipulate surgical instruments, a third robotic limb that's attached to her torso plays a supporting role. Or picture a construction worker who is thankful for his extra robotic hand as it braces the heavy beam he's fastening into place with his other two hands. Imagine wearing an exoskeleton that would let you handle multiple objects simultaneously, like Spiderman's Dr. Octopus. Or contemplate the out-there music a composer could write for a pianist who has 12 fingers to spread across the keyboard.

Such scenarios may seem like science fiction, but recent progress in robotics and neuroscience makes extra robotic limbs conceivable with today's technology. Our research groups at Imperial College London and the University of Freiburg, in Germany, together with partners in the European project NIMA, are now working to figure out whether such augmentation can be realized in practice to extend human abilities. The main questions we're tackling involve both neuroscience and neurotechnology: Is the human brain capable of controlling additional body parts as effectively as it controls biological parts? And if so, what neural signals can be used for this control?

[...] Two practical questions stand out: Can we achieve neural control of extra robotic limbs concurrently with natural movement, and can the system work without the user's exclusive concentration? If the answer to either of these questions is no, we won't have a practical technology, but we'll still have an interesting new tool for research into the neuroscience of motor control. If the answer to both questions is yes, we may be ready to enter a new era of human augmentation. For now, our (biological) fingers are crossed.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 01 2023, @01:12PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 01 2023, @01:12PM (#1289628)

    TRILLIAN:
    We picked those couple of guys up in sec- Zaphod! Please take your hand off me. And the other one. Thank you. And the other one.

    ZAPHOD:
    I grew that one specially for you Trillian, you know that. Took me six months but it was worth every minute.

  • (Score: 2) by choose another one on Wednesday February 01 2023, @02:15PM (1 child)

    by choose another one (515) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday February 01 2023, @02:15PM (#1289637)

    Well that's a starter for ten, but with the musical reference in TFS in mind and wanting to go out on one further (additional) limb, I thought someone would have mentioned the Hydrogen Sonata...

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 01 2023, @05:55PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 01 2023, @05:55PM (#1289687)

      Not as hard to play as the Hydrogen Sonata (per the wiki entry on the book), but suitably named, try "The Comet is Coming" -- live in LA a few years ago,

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbsK1_goV_0 [youtube.com]

      One of many amazing bands from the current jazz scene in London, UK.