The weekly weird
Robot exo-skeleton experimentation
A man paralysed from the shoulders down has been able to walk using a robotic exoskeleton controlled by his brain.
The 28-year-old patient used a system of sensors implanted near his brain to send messages to move all four of his paralysed limbs after a two-year-long trial of the whole-body exoskeleton. The system translated the brain signals into the movements the patient thought about, and sent his commands to the exoskeleton.
The results, published in The Lancet Neurology journal on, bring doctors a step closer to one day being able to help paralysed patients drive computers using brain signals alone, according to researchers who led the work. But for now, the exoskeleton is purely an experimental prototype and is “far from clinical application,” they added.
Previous brain-computer technologies have used invasive sensors implanted in the brain, where they can be more dangerous and often stop working.