Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Krishna Shenoy, Indian-Origin Electrical Engineer Develops Thought-Controlled Prostheses

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Aug, 2015 11:59 AM
    An Indian American electrical engineer from the Stanford University has developed a technique to make brain-controlled prostheses more precise.
     
    The thought-controlled device developed by Krishna Shenoy and his team analyses the neuron sample and makes dozens of corrective adjustments to the estimate of the brain's electrical pattern -- all in the blink of an eye.
     
    "Brain-controlled prostheses will lead to a substantial improvement in quality of life," Shenoy said.
     
    "The speed and accuracy demonstrated in this prosthesis results from years of basic neuroscience research and from combining these scientific discoveries with the principled design of mathematical control algorithms," he added.
     
    Shenoy's team tested a brain-controlled cursor meant to operate a virtual keyboard.
     
    The system is intended for people with paralysis and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also called Lou Gehrig's disease. ALS degrades one's ability to move.
     
    "The thought-controlled keypad would allow a person with paralysis or ALS to run an electronic wheelchair and use a computer or tablet," Shenoy informed.
     
    The goal is to get thought-controlled prosthetics to people with ALS.
     
    Today these people may use an eye-tracking system to direct cursors or a "head mouse" that tracks the movement of the head.
     
    Both are fatiguing to use as neither provides the natural and intuitive control of readings taken directly from the brain.
     
    The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has also given Shenoy's team its nod to conduct a pilot clinical trial of their thought-controlled cursor on people with spinal cord injuries.
     
    "This is a fundamentally new approach that can be further refined and optimised to give brain-controlled prostheses greater performance, and therefore greater clinical viability," Shenoy noted.
     
    When we type or perform other precise tasks, our brains and muscles usually work together effortlessly.
     
    But when a neurological disease or spinal cord injury severs the connection between the brain and limbs, once-easy motions become difficult or impossible.
     
    In recent years, researchers have sought to give people suffering from injury or disease some restored motor function by developing thought-controlled prostheses.
     
    Such devices tap into the relevant regions of the brain, bypass damaged connections and deliver thought commands to devices such as virtual keypads.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal Nature Communications.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month
    New York City cat lovers will be able to tuck in with tabbies next month, when a cafe opens offering feline companionship, a trend imported from Asia which has...

    New York's first cat cafe opens next month

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse
    A study co-authored by Indian-origin scientist Anurag Agrawal has found that when plants develop mutually beneficial relationships with animals...

    'Friendly' plants become more diverse

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb
     After the discovery of a human skeleton at the Amphipolis burial complex in northern Greece this week, the focus of experts has turned to the DNA testing...

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride
    French daredevil Francois Gissy set a new world record for the highest speed attained while riding a bicycle - reaching a gut churning speed of 333 km/hour in 4.8 seconds....

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride

    'Love hormone' shoo away fear

    'Love hormone' shoo away fear
    “Under Oxytocin's influence, the expectation of recurrent fear subsequently abates to a greater extent,” explained Rene Hurlemann from....

    'Love hormone' shoo away fear

    How late developers can change their destiny

    How late developers can change their destiny
    My teachers always told my parents: "Er, he's probably a late developer." Years later, I'm beginning to ask how late is late, exactly? This side of the after-life?

    How late developers can change their destiny