Using competition to accelerate innovation in prosthetics

cybathlon-bionic-olympicsI wrote earlier this year about the innovative potential of the proposed automated driving championship.  Competition has a long history of driving innovation, with those run by DARPA into driverless technology a prime example.

In modern times, they have seen an incarnation in the various open innovation challenges whereby participants compete for the prizes on offer.

One day cybathlon

Along these lines is the Cybathlon event that will be held in Zurich later this year.  The event hopes to attract participants from around the world to show off the latest developments in prosthetics, assistive robotics and brain-computer interfaces.

The competition tests the ability of the technologies, and their wearers, to complete a range of standard, every-day tasks that have traditionally proved very challenging.

The aim was to provide a means of benchmarking progress in assistive technology, with the standard ‘race tracks’ allowing easy comparison of performance, with entrants put through their paces in six distinct disciplines.

A hot topic

This is a topic I’ve touched on a few times in recent months, and there are some fascinating technologies on the market.

For instance, a team from Carnegie Mellon have developed a robotic prosthetic that can help its user regain their balance.  It does this by working in much the same way as a human leg.

Or you have the EsoGlove, which is a lightweight rehabilitation device that aims to improve on existing robotic hand rehabilitation devices.

It contains sensors that can detect muscle signals, and the softness of the glove allows natural movement of the hand.

Meanwhile, a number of projects have attempted to connect up our brain waves with prosthetic devices, including the Australian Stenstrode exoskeleton device, or the Johns Hopkins based device that allows a robotic arm to be controlled by thought alone.

The researchers used the technique to attach the thought controlled arm to an amputee’s stump, thus significantly extending the motions that are possible.

The device is implanted into the bone at the end of the residual limb and allows patients to use the arm without any kind of harness.

Bringing these kind of innovations together will hopefully accelerate the already rapid pace of progress that’s made in the field, with exciting implications.

Certainly a project to watch with interest.

 

Related

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail

9 thoughts on “Using competition to accelerate innovation in prosthetics

  1. Hopefully this gets popular. Imagine it being bigger than the super bowl. Bigger than the world cup. Millions of people watch the games. Companies quickly begin pouring resources into building robots to compete and advertise their brand. Robot evolution would explode. I can dream…

  2. This is actually awesome, if it takes off it could lead to a rapid growth of cybernetics. It would be more than government and business funding it but actual consumers.

  3. Well, this should be entertaining. If anything its more fair than the real olympics.

    To do good in the real olympics you have to work hard for 20 years, and be born a physical embodyment of a perfect human in your selected sport.

    To do good in the bionic olympics, you have to work hard for 5 years at your selected field of work, and modify yourself with parts keenly tooled for maximum efficiency.

    Since I am never going to be as good a runner as a Kenyan, I have no reason to care about the outcome of the olympics or try to fruitlessly match the athletes by training. The bionic olympics are just much more attainable in terms of self improvement.

    Y'know, when it advances beyond just crippled people with robotics competing.

  4. I like this, and it makes a lot of sense to use competition as a spur to better things. We've seen how effective it's been with things like the DARPA driverless car challenges.

    • I want all this to happen. I want the radical advancement of human limits combined with philosophical debates. The potential AI crisis. This is a type of world I would love to be part of. Bring it on!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Captcha loading...