Updates and reflections on Mirror Therapy and related non-invasive techniques to reduce or eliminate Phantom Limb Pain globally for amputees and the work of non -profit End The Pain Project to accomplish these goals.
Showing posts with label prosthetic device development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prosthetic device development. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
An Old/New Prosthetic That Works
"The best designs and innovations come from people who refuse to accept the definitions and limitations set be others" says Mark Lesek, an amputee inventor. Mark lost his arm several years ago. Now his search for a better prosthetic could improve the lives of amputees everywhere.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4DDt30Aat4
Viewers can contact Mark at: mark@dynamicwelding.com
Sunday, October 27, 2013
University of Leicester Insect Study could help boost biomechanical prosthetic limb development
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| Photo ©Tom Matheson |
Neurobiologists from the University of Leicester have shown that insect limbs can move without muscles – a finding that may provide engineers with new ways to improve the control of robotic and prosthetic limbs.
The study, published in the journal Current Biology, helps to explain how insects control their movements using a close interplay of neuronal control and ‘clever biomechanical tricks’.
Research shows that the structure of some insect leg joints causes the legs to move even in the absence of muscles. So-called ‘passive joint forces’ serve to return the limb back towards a preferred resting position.
The passive movements differ in limbs that have different behavioral roles and different musculature, suggesting that the joint structures are specifically adapted to complement muscle forces. The researchers propose a motor control scheme for insect limb joints in which not all movements are driven by muscles.
Dr Tom Matheson, from the Department of Biology at the University of Leicester led the research and said he hoped the research on locusts and grasshoppers would “spur a new understanding of how limbs work and can be controlled, by not just insects, but by other animals, people, and even by robots”.
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