Brain Robotics Unveils Affordable Prosthetic Limbs at CES 2019
Prosthetic limb development has dramatically progressed over the past few decades, improving mobility for people with artificial limbs more than ever thought possible. Amazing as these high-tech protheses might be, they’re often so expensive that the people who need them the most can’t afford them.
Slashed Pricing
Brain Robotics strategic lead Sid Shang said: “We want to help more people live the life they want where they couldn’t before because a prosthetic was so expensive. We want to make this technology affordable for as many people as possible.”
3D Modeling
Instead of going through multiple replications to find the perfect fit between prosthesis and patient, Brain Robotics uses 3D scanning and printing to create custom sockets tailored to perfectly fit each individual. The patient simply puts their amputated limb inside the scanner, and the machine produces a digital model of the missing parts. Gone is the need for costly doctor visits and modifications that end up doubling the cost of the prosthetic.
Parts And Services Simplified
Unrivaled Fluidity
Just before we left the Brain Robotics display, the rep smiled and said they’d saved the best news for last. EMG, a procedure that traces the electrical action produced by muscles through a set of electrodes, typically requires extreme concentration on the user’s part to produce movement. These prosthetic limbs, however, utilize highly developed machine learning algorithms with multichannel EMG muscle signal recognition, granting patients intuitive control of the prosthetics like they’ve never had before.
Artificial intelligence facilitates the prosthetics so they can accurately interpret the EMG signals and stay strong and steady. Each time a person wants to make a gesture and thinks what they want to do, they trigger a sensor that tells the limb to complete the task. Better yet, this AI steadily increases the aptitude of the prosthetic with each use, which means its movement becomes faster and more fluid over time.
Hands down, one of our most enlightening CES experiences.