Paralyzed Woman Moves Robotic Arm With Her Mind - East Idaho News

Paralyzed Woman Moves Robotic Arm With Her Mind

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051612 ParalyzedWomanRoboticArmABC?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1337197334697ABC News(PROVIDENCE, R.I.) — A 58-year-old woman paralyzed by a stroke was all smiles after sipping her cinnamon latte with the help of a mind-controlled robotic arm.

Cathy Hutchinson is one of two tetraplegic patients able to reach and grasp with a robotic limb linked to a tiny sensor in her brain, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature. The device, called BrainGate, bypasses the nerve circuits broken by the brainstem stroke and replaces them with wires that run outside Hutchinson’s body. The implanted sensor is about the size of a baby aspirin.

“You can go from the brain, which seems to be working quite well, directly to a device like a computer or a robotic arm,” said BrianGate developer John Donoghue, director of the Institute for Brain Science at Brown University in Providence, R.I. “This can help restore independence to a person who was completely reliant on other people for every activity, whether it’s brushing their teeth, eating their dinner or taking a drink.”

Hutchinson, who has been unable to move or speak for 15 years, had the 96-channel sensor implanted in her brain’s motor cortex in 2005. Since then, the BrainGate team has been fine-tuning the system to give her back some of the control she lost.

For most people, reaching and grasping is effortless. But the simple movement is guided by a complex pattern of brain activity, according to Donoghue.

With its hair-like electrodes, the BrainGate sensor taps into the flurry of brain activity, recording electrical signals that can be translated into movement commands. BrainGate also allows Hutchinson to move a computer cursor so she can communicate. But the device is not quite ready for prime time, Donoghue cautioned.

“Currently patients have a plug on their heads and need to be connected by to a cart full of electronics,” he said. “We need to replace it with a wireless system.”

Donoghue is collaborating with Arto Nurmikko, a neuroengineer at Brown, to do just that.

While the BrainGate system can currently control an external device, like a robotic arm, it could one day control a person’s muscles.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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