The new prosthetic hand interprets muscular signals from brain activity with machine learning to make movements more natural.
Scientists at Imperial College London and the University of Göttingen have used machine learning to improve the performance of prosthetic hands.
The new bionic hand is not only more natural but it is also superior in terms of functionality in daily tasks than what’s currently available to patients. Professor Dario Farina Department of Bioengineering
After testing their prototype on five amputees, they found that new machine learning-based control was far better at providing natural, fluid movements than the currently available technology.
The researchers said the findings, which are published in Science Robotics, could spark a “new generation of prosthetic limbs.”
Professor Dario Farina, senior author of the paper from Imperial’s Department of Bioengineering, said: “When designing bionic limbs, our main goal is to let patients control them as naturally as though they were their biological limbs. This new technology takes us a step closer to achieving this.”
Machine learning
Current technology works by directly controlling the prosthetic motors with a few muscular signals.
The new bionic hand, developed in collaboration with Imperial and the University of Göttingen, uses a human-machine interface that interprets the patient’s intentions and sends commands to the artificial limb.
It contains eight electrodes that pick up weak electrical signals from the patient’s stump, before amplifying them and sending them to a mini-computer, also located in the prosthetic.
The mini-computer then runs the machine learning algorithm to interpret the signals, before commanding the hand’s motors to move in the way the patient wants.
Patients found they were able to easily rotate the wrist and open the hand either simultaneously or separately. They also found the movements far more natural than the conventional bionic limbs they were used to.
In addition to types of function, patients could also control the speed of individual movement independently of other movements. For example, patients could turn the hand slowly but open it quickly at the same time. The researchers say this is an essential component for movements that feel natural.
Prior to use, the patient and bionic hand underwent training so the machine learning algorithm could ‘learn’ how to interpret their unique electronic signals. Professor Farina hopes to eliminate the need for this in future prototypes, without sacrificing personalisation to specific patients.
Professor Farina said: “The new bionic hand is not only more natural but it is also superior in terms of functionality in daily tasks than what’s currently available to patients.
“Following this clinical study, we hope to have this available on the market for patients within three years.”
The researchers are currently working to gain greater control over the hand, including the ability to move individual fingers, and eliminate the need for electrodes by transferring signals wirelessly within the patient’s body.
All photos and videos credited to the University of Göttingen.
The study was funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program.
“Simultaneous control of multiple functions of bionic hand prostheses: Performance and robustness in end users” by Janne M. Hahne, Meike A. Schweisfurth, Mario Koppe, and Dario Farina, published 20 June 2018 in Science Robotics.
Article text (excluding photos or graphics) © Imperial College London.
Photos and graphics subject to third party copyright used with permission or © Imperial College London.
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Caroline Brogan
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