Thanks To A Robotic Exoskeleton
The
2014 World Cup begins next month in Brazil and will feature something
truly amazing: the plan is for a paralyzed, non-ambulatory Brazilian
teenager to stand up and kick the first ball of the first game using a
motorized exoskeleton and special 3D-printed helmet.
Created by an international team of designers and engineers, the
video shows Colorado State University’s design for the custom trode
helmet that will keep the leads in place and protect the kicker’s head.
First announced in January, the exoskeleton is finally coming together and should be ready for the kick-off. Called the Walk Again Project
at Duke University, the kick will be one of the first massively public
demonstrations of a human controlling a robot with neural signals.
The
Walk Again Project is a nonprofit, international collaboration among
the Duke University Center for Neuroengineering, the Technical
University of Munich, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in
Lausanne, the Edmond and Lily Safra International Institute of
Neuroscience of Natal in Brazil, The University of California, Davis,
The University of Kentucky, and Regis Kopper of The Duke immersive
Virtual Environment.
The CSU researchers, led by David Prawel,
built the helmet while other teams built the exoskeleton and the neuro
interface for the robot. They’re using a 3D printer to extrude a foam
structure that is soft and squishy and that will be able to keep the
electrodes in place while in motion. The kicker will also train in a VR
environment to get used to walking with their new nervous system.
Source:http://techcrunch.com/
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