Direct neural sensory feedback and control of a prosthetic arm Article

Dhillon, GS, Horch, KW. (2005). Direct neural sensory feedback and control of a prosthetic arm . IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NEURAL SYSTEMS AND REHABILITATION ENGINEERING, 13(4), 468-472. 10.1109/TNSRE.2005.856072

cited authors

  • Dhillon, GS; Horch, KW

authors

abstract

  • Evidence indicates that user acceptance of modern artificial limbs by amputees would be significantly enhanced by a system that provides appropriate, graded, distally referred sensations of touch and joint movement, and that the functionality of limb prostheses would be improved by a more natural control mechanism. We have recently demonstrated that it is possible to implant electrodes within individual fascicles of peripheral nerve stumps in amputees, that stimulation through these electrodes can produce graded, discrete sensations of touch or movement referred to the amputee's phantom hand, and that recordings of motor neuron activity associated with attempted movements of the phantom limb through these electrodes can be used as graded control signals. We report here that this approach allows amputees to both judge and set grip force and joint position in an artificial arm, in the absence of visual input, thus providing a substrate for better integration of the artificial limb into the amputee's body image. We believe this to be the first demonstration of direct neural feedback from and direct neural control of an artificial arm in amputees. © 2005 IEEE.

publication date

  • December 1, 2005

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 468

end page

  • 472

volume

  • 13

issue

  • 4