• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Sonas Multi Media
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entairtainment
  • Science
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entairtainment
  • Science
No Result
View All Result
Sonas Multi Media
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Tetraplegic Patients Take Mind-Controlled Wheelchair for a Spin 

sonasmultimedia by sonasmultimedia
November 18, 2022
in Science
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



Three people with limited to no mobility in their limbs were able to navigate a specially designed wheelchair just by thinking about where they wanted to go, a study published today (November 18) in iScience reports. Unlike some previous designs which used embedded electrodes or asked users to focus on points of light on a screen, which can cause eye strain, the wheelchair uses a noninvasive brain-machine interface involving an electrode-studded cap to interpret brain activity. After training, the users were able to steer their way through a cluttered obstacle course.

“Our research highlights a potential pathway for improved clinical translation of non-invasive brain-machine interface technology,” study coauthor and University of Texas at Austin computer engineering and neurology researcher José del R. Millán says in a press release from the journal.

See “The Rise of BCI Enables Advances in Neuroscience”

The wheelchair is steered by an algorithm that translates brain activity inferred from electroencephalography (EEG) into movement. Tetraplegic users steered the chair by imagining lifting their arms, a signal the chair interprets as an instruction to move right, or their legs, which the chair takes a signal to move left. In the first session, the steering accuracy ranged from 43 to 55 percent, but two of the three participants improved over two to five months of biweekly training to 95 and 98 percent accuracy, according to the press release. The researchers attribute this improvement to both machine learning and human learning, as the two patients exhibited shifts in brainwave patterns by the end of the experiment. The third participant did not show these shifts and did not improve in steering accuracy.

Millán tells The Daily Beast that it’s important to take the less favorable results into account, as it shows “there is no magic bullet,” and that engineers and scientists aiming to enhance people’s mobility “need to have several options, and we also need to understand that the same intervention given to two people will not have the same effect.”

He also notes to New Scientist that the system isn’t quite ready for the real world. “I wouldn’t say the approach is useful on busy streets or less controlled environments,” he says. An additional caveat is that the design requires a gel under the cap that dries out in a few hours, the outlet reports, which limits the wheelchair’s use duration. Still, “the ability to move independently at all can be a huge benefit” to tetraplegic people, he says. University of Kent signal processing researcher Palaniappan Ramaswamy, who was not a part of the research team, also tells New Scientist that advances in gel-free technologies, such as electrodes that can be printed onto the skin, could help make the device ready for prime time in the near future.



Source_link

Previous Post

Bucks, Sixers won’t light up the scoreboard, plus college basketball, college football and NFL weekend bets

Next Post

Health Care Foundation’s Annual Snowflake Campaign Kick’s Off

sonasmultimedia

sonasmultimedia

Next Post

Health Care Foundation’s Annual Snowflake Campaign Kick’s Off

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent News

Jamahal Hill credits three generations of family, including late aunt, for his rise to UFC champion

January 26, 2023

Digital Air Strike Strategically Rebrands to DAS Technology and Acquires 7th Company

January 26, 2023

FTX creditors include Goldman Sachs, New York Times and Netflix

January 26, 2023

Gerard Butler ‘almost killed’ Hilary Swank while filming movie | Entertainment News

January 26, 2023

Sonas Multi Media

Welcome to Sonas Multi Media The goal of Sonas Multi Media is to give you the absolute best news sources for any topic! Our topics are carefully curated and constantly updated as we know the web moves fast so we try to as well.

Browse by Category

  • Business
  • Entairtainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology

Recent Post

  • Jamahal Hill credits three generations of family, including late aunt, for his rise to UFC champion
  • Digital Air Strike Strategically Rebrands to DAS Technology and Acquires 7th Company
  • FTX creditors include Goldman Sachs, New York Times and Netflix
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Copyright © 2022 Sonasmultimedia.com | All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Technology
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entairtainment
  • Science

Copyright © 2022 Sonasmultimedia.com | All Rights Reserved.