When you squeeze this man's prosthetic limb, he can feel it
On Thursday, at the White House Frontiers Conference in Pittsburg, President Barack Obama shook hands with a remarkable young man. Nathan Copeland, who is now 30, has been paralyzed since his car spun out of control one rainy winter night when he was a teen. But thanks to a new breakthrough in prosthetics, when Obama shook his hand, Copeland could feel it. When they fist-bumped, Copeland could feel that, too.
The sensation of feeling came via Copeland’s mind-controlled robotic arm. Last spring, surgeons implanted four tiny microelectrode arrays into the sensory cortex area of Copeland’s brain. The prosthetic arm delivers currents to the electrodes that stimulate his brain to create sensations of touch that feel as if they are coming from his own paralyzed hand.
Copeland can control the arm using other chips implanted in a different part of his brain. The whole thing works as a sort of sensory feedback loop: Copeland’s brain sends a signal to the robotic arm to move, and the arm then sends a signal back to him. This is, of course, how feelings like touch typically work, but here researchers were able to reroute those signals to a prosthetic limb.