Inflatable robotic hand gives amputees real-time tactile control
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/08/210816125700.htm
But this high-tech dexterity comes at a price. Neuroprosthetics can cost tens of thousands of dollars and are built around metal skeletons, with electrical motors that can be heavy and rigid.
Now engineers at MIT and Shanghai Jiao Tong University have designed a soft, lightweight, and potentially low-cost neuroprosthetic hand. Amputees who tested the artificial limb performed daily activities, such as zipping a suitcase, pouring a carton of juice, and petting a cat, just as well as -- and in some cases better than -- those with more rigid neuroprosthetics.