
Scientists develop device that allows amputees to feel warmth in phantom hand
Scientists have developed a device that allows amputees to feel warmth in their phantom hand. MiniTouch consists of a small sensor placed on an amputee’s prosthetic finger and electrodes that mimic sensations on the residual arm. The electrodes on the amputated arm are able to relay the temperature of the object being touched by the finger sensor, giving “the illusion that we are cooling down, or warming up, missing fingers”. The researchers said their findings, published in the journal Science, could allow amputees to have temperature-sensing technology built into their prosthetic limbs, without the need for invasive technology. The team said they developed MiniTouch after unexpectedly discovering that amputees somehow are able to feel temperatures in their missing hand. Dr Solaiman Shokur, a neuroengineer and scientist at Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland, said: “We discovered a new mechanism that we call the thermal phantom sensation.” In an able-bodied person, if something hot or cold is placed on the forearm, that person will feel the object’s temperature directly on their forearm. But in amputees, that temperature sensation on the residual arm may be felt in the phantom, missing hand, the researchers said. Dr Shokur said: “(During the tests) we were expecting for them to tell us, with eyes closed, where they felt it (temperature sensations) on the stump, and if it was hot or cold. “Instead, they pointed into a drawing of a hand that they had in front of them and they told us ‘I feel it there’. “We asked them several times ‘What do you mean by that, I feel it there?’ and then they clarified that they felt it into their phantom missing hand. “So this discovery was crucial for us to develop a neurotechnology that could integrate the prosthetic hand of patients.” The team said they were able to successfully test their bionic technology in 17 out of 27 patients. MiniTouch uses information about an object’s heat conducting properties to determine how hot or cold it is. The scientists said they found that small areas of skin on the amputated arm are able to project temperature sensations to specific parts of the phantom hand, like the thumb, or the tip of an index finger. They also discovered that these temperature sensations between the residual arm and the projected phantom one is unique to each patient. Fabrizio Fidati, an amputee from Italy, who took part in the study, said: “Warmth is the most beautiful feeling there is… like when we need warmth, we use a hot water bottle.” He added: “So far, prostheses have mainly been designed to have simple everyday movements, to help you in your everyday life. “But integrations of sensations of hot and cold, in my opinion, also serves to improve social interactions. “When shaking hands with people, warmth is… fundamental.” Study participant Francesca Rossi, also from Italy, added: “Temperature feedback is a nice sensation because you feel the limb, the phantom limb, entirely. “It does not feel phantom anymore because your limb is back.” Read More Charity boss speaks out over ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide Ukraine war’s heaviest fight rages in east - follow live Self-driving cars will cause ‘moral panic’ – transport minister Cryptocurrency trading should be regulated as gambling, says treasury committee WhatsApp offers new password protected feature to hide messages
2023-05-19 02:18

SoftBank Ups Stake In Symbotic in Joint Venture Deal
SoftBank Group Corp. is setting up an artificial intelligence-oriented warehousing joint venture with Symbotic Inc. and buying more
2023-07-24 19:17

Rivian Breakout Is Expanding the Rift in EV Stocks
Investors are showing a willingness to give beaten-down electric-vehicle stocks another chance, but they’re being more discerning this
2023-07-12 22:25

Rocket Lab Inks New Deal to Launch HASTE Mission from Virginia
LONG BEACH, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug 8, 2023--
2023-08-09 04:28

Save 40% on the iRobot Braava Jet m6 robot mop this Prime Day
TL;DR: The iRobot Braava Jet m6 robot mop is on sale for $299.99 this Prime
2023-07-12 16:52

Avnos Inc. Secures Funding and Strategic Partnerships From ConocoPhillips, JetBlue Ventures and Shell Ventures, Totaling Over $80M
LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 13, 2023--
2023-07-13 19:25

Dell Sales Top Estimates in Positive Signal for PC Market
Dell Technologies Inc. reported better-than-expected sales of personal computers and data center hardware, fueling hopes of a recovery
2023-09-01 04:56

Benson Hill Appoints Chief Transformation Officer to Drive Company Evolution
ST. LOUIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug 10, 2023--
2023-08-10 19:17

Kingston Digital Launches New Data Center SSD for Mixed-Use Workloads
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 8, 2023--
2023-05-08 21:51

Jon Gnagy, Who Taught TV Viewers About the Joys of Art Before Bob Ross
Long before Bob Ross and his happy little trees, Jon Gnagy was teaching art to the masses.
2023-10-18 01:15

Broadcom wins conditional EU antitrust approval to buy VMware
By Foo Yun Chee BRUSSELS U.S. chipmaker Broadcom secured EU antitrust approval on Wednesday for its $61 billion
2023-07-12 17:52

proteanTecs to Present in Open Compute Project (OCP) Webinar on Silent Data Errors for Resilient Data Centers
HAIFA, Israel--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 15, 2023--
2023-05-15 22:17
You Might Like...

Perfect Corp. to Showcase Game-Changing Generative AI Technologies at the 2023 Global Beauty & Fashion Tech Forum

How to reduce queue times on 'Diablo IV'

X reorganizes trust and safety team under Musk, CEO Yaccarino

Here’s What to Watch for at the G-7 Summit in Japan

Fund Managers in ‘Complete Shock’ After Sunak’s Green Pivot

Microsoft Finally Realizes Nobody Wants Its Windows 11 Preinstalled Bloatware

Elon Musk shades Mark Zuckerberg with withering message and Internet erupts

Mercedes won't join Renault's new electric van project-sources