New bionics let us run, climb and dance | Hugh Herr | TED

15,169,041 views ・ 2014-03-28

TED


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Looking deeply inside nature,
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through the magnifying glass of science,
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designers extract principles, processes and materials
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that are forming the very basis of design methodology.
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From synthetic constructs that resemble biological materials,
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to computational methods that emulate neural processes,
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nature is driving design.
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Design is also driving nature.
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In realms of genetics, regenerative medicine and synthetic biology,
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designers are growing novel technologies,
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not foreseen or anticipated by nature.
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Bionics explores the interplay between biology and design.
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As you can see, my legs are bionic.
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Today, I will tell human stories of bionic integration;
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how electromechanics attached to the body, and implanted inside the body
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are beginning to bridge the gap between disability and ability,
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between human limitation and human potential.
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Bionics has defined my physicality.
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In 1982, both of my legs were amputated
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due to tissue damage from frostbite,
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incurred during a mountain-climbing accident.
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At that time, I didn't view my body as broken.
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I reasoned that a human being can never be "broken."
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Technology is broken.
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Technology is inadequate.
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This simple but powerful idea was a call to arms,
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to advance technology for the elimination of my own disability,
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and ultimately, the disability of others.
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I began by developing specialized limbs
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that allowed me to return to the vertical world
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of rock and ice climbing.
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I quickly realized that the artificial part of my body is malleable;
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able to take on any form, any function --
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a blank slate for which to create,
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perhaps, structures that could extend beyond biological capability.
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I made my height adjustable.
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I could be as short as five feet or as tall as I'd like.
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(Laughter)
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So when I was feeling bad about myself,
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insecure, I would jack my height up.
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(Laughter)
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But when I was feeling confident and suave,
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I would knock my height down a notch, just to give the competition a chance.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Narrow-edged feet allowed me to climb steep rock fissures,
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where the human foot cannot penetrate,
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and spiked feet enabled me to climb vertical ice walls,
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without ever experiencing muscle leg fatigue.
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Through technological innovation,
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I returned to my sport, stronger and better.
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Technology had eliminated my disability,
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and allowed me a new climbing prowess.
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As a young man, I imagined a future world where technology so advanced
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could rid the world of disability,
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a world in which neural implants would allow
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the visually impaired to see.
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A world in which the paralyzed could walk, via body exoskeletons.
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Sadly, because of deficiencies in technology,
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disability is rampant in the world.
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This gentleman is missing three limbs.
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As a testimony to current technology, he is out of the wheelchair,
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but we need to do a better job in bionics, to allow, one day, full rehabilitation
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for a person with this level of injury.
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At the MIT Media Lab, we've established the Center for Extreme Bionics.
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The mission of the center is to put forth fundamental science
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and technological capability
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that will allow the biomechatronic and regenerative repair of humans,
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across a broad range of brain and body disabilities.
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Today, I'm going to tell you how my legs function, how they work,
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as a case in point for this center.
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Now, I made sure to shave my legs last night,
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because I knew I'd be showing them off.
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(Laughter)
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Bionics entails the engineering of extreme interfaces.
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There's three extreme interfaces in my bionic limbs:
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mechanical, how my limbs are attached to my biological body;
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dynamic, how they move like flesh and bone;
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and electrical, how they communicate with my nervous system.
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I'll begin with mechanical interface.
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In the area of design, we still do not understand
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how to attach devices to the body mechanically.
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It's extraordinary to me that in this day and age,
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one of the most mature, oldest technologies
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in the human timeline, the shoe, still gives us blisters.
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How can this be?
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We have no idea how to attach things to our bodies.
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This is the beautifully lyrical design work
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of Professor Neri Oxman at the MIT Media Lab,
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showing spatially varying exoskeletal impedances,
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shown here by color variation in this 3D-printed model.
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Imagine a future where clothing is stiff and soft where you need it,
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when you need it, for optimal support and flexibility,
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without ever causing discomfort.
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My bionic limbs are attached to my biological body
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via synthetic skins with stiffness variations,
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that mirror my underlying tissue biomechanics.
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To achieve that mirroring, we first developed a mathematical model
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of my biological limb.
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To that end, we used imaging tools such as MRI,
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to look inside my body,
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to figure out the geometries and locations of various tissues.
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We also took robotic tools --
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here's a 14-actuator circle that goes around the biological limb.
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The actuators come in, find the surface of the limb,
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measure its unloaded shape,
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and then they push on the tissues
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to measure tissue compliances at each anatomical point.
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We combine these imaging and robotic data
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to build a mathematical description of my biological limb, shown on the left.
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You see a bunch of points, or nodes?
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At each node, there's a color that represents tissue compliance.
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We then do a mathematical transformation to the design of the synthetic skin,
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shown on the right.
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And we've discovered optimality is:
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where the body is stiff, the synthetic skin should be soft,
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where the body is soft, the synthetic skin is stiff,
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and this mirroring occurs across all tissue compliances.
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With this framework, we've produced bionic limbs
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that are the most comfortable limbs I've ever worn.
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Clearly, in the future, our clothing, our shoes, our braces, our prostheses,
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will no longer be designed and manufactured using artisan strategies,
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but rather, data-driven quantitative frameworks.
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In that future, our shoes will no longer give us blisters.
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We're also embedding sensing and smart materials
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into the synthetic skins.
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This is a material developed by SRI International, California.
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Under electrostatic effect, it changes stiffness.
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So under zero voltage, the material is compliant,
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it's floppy like paper.
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Then the button's pushed, a voltage is applied,
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and it becomes stiff as a board.
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(Tapping sounds)
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We embed this material into the synthetic skin
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that attaches my bionic limb to my biological body.
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When I walk here, it's no voltage.
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My interface is soft and compliant.
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The button's pushed, voltage is applied, and it stiffens,
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offering me a greater maneuverability over the bionic limb.
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We're also building exoskeletons.
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This exoskeleton becomes stiff and soft
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in just the right areas of the running cycle,
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to protect the biological joints from high impacts and degradation.
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In the future, we'll all be wearing exoskeletons
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in common activities, such as running.
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Next, dynamic interface.
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How do my bionic limbs move like flesh and bone?
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At my MIT lab, we study how humans with normal physiologies
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stand, walk and run.
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What are the muscles doing,
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and how are they controlled by the spinal cord?
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This basic science motivates what we build.
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We're building bionic ankles, knees and hips.
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We're building body parts from the ground up.
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The bionic limbs that I'm wearing are called BiOMs.
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They've been fitted to nearly 1,000 patients,
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400 of which have been wounded U.S. soldiers.
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How does it work?
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At heel strike, under computer control,
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the system controls stiffness,
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to attenuate the shock of the limb hitting the ground.
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Then at mid-stance, the bionic limb outputs high torques and powers
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to lift the person into the walking stride,
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comparable to how muscles work in the calf region.
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This bionic propulsion is very important clinically to patients.
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So on the left, you see the bionic device worn by a lady,
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on the right, a passive device worn by the same lady,
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that fails to emulate normal muscle function,
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enabling her to do something everyone should be able to do:
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go up and down their steps at home.
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Bionics also allows for extraordinary athletic feats.
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Here's a gentleman running up a rocky pathway.
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This is Steve Martin -- not the comedian --
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who lost his legs in a bomb blast in Afghanistan.
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We're also building exoskeletal structures using these same principles,
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that wrap around the biological limb.
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This gentleman does not have any leg condition, any disability.
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He has a normal physiology,
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so these exoskeletons are applying muscle-like torques and powers,
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so that his own muscles need not apply those torques and powers.
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This is the first exoskeleton in history that actually augments human walking.
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It significantly reduces metabolic cost.
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It's so profound in its augmentation,
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that when a normal, healthy person wears the device for 40 minutes
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and then takes it off,
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their own biological legs feel ridiculously heavy and awkward.
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We're beginning the age in which machines attached to our bodies
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will make us stronger and faster and more efficient.
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Moving on to electrical interface:
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How do my bionic limbs communicate with my nervous system?
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Across my residual limb are electrodes
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that measure the electrical pulse of my muscles.
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That's communicated to the bionic limb,
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so when I think about moving my phantom limb,
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the robot tracks those movement desires.
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This diagram shows fundamentally how the bionic limb is controlled.
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So we model the missing biological limb,
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and we've discovered what reflexes occurred,
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how the reflexes of the spinal cord are controlling the muscles.
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And that capability is embedded in the chips of the bionic limb.
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What we've done, then, is we modulate the sensitivity of the reflex,
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the modeled spinal reflex, with the neural signal,
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so when I relax my muscles in my residual limb,
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I get very little torque and power,
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but the more I fire my muscles, the more torque I get,
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and I can even run.
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And that was the first demonstration of a running gait under neural command.
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Feels great.
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(Applause)
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We want to go a step further.
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We want to actually close the loop
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between the human and the bionic external limb.
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We're doing experiments
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where we're growing nerves, transected nerves,
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through channels, or micro-channel arrays.
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On the other side of the channel,
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the nerve then attaches to cells,
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skin cells and muscle cells.
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In the motor channels, we can sense how the person wishes to move.
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That can be sent out wirelessly to the bionic limb,
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then [sensory information] on the bionic limb
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can be converted to stimulations in adjacent channels,
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sensory channels.
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So when this is fully developed and for human use,
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persons like myself will not only have
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synthetic limbs that move like flesh and bone,
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but actually feel like flesh and bone.
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This video shows Lisa Mallette,
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shortly after being fitted with two bionic limbs.
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Indeed, bionics is making a profound difference in people's lives.
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(Video) Lisa Mallette: Oh my God.
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LM: Oh my God, I can't believe it!
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(Video) (Laughter)
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LM: It's just like I've got a real leg!
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Woman: Now, don't start running.
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Man: Now turn around, and do the same thing walking up,
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but get on your heel to toe, like you would normally just walk on level ground.
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Try to walk right up the hill.
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LM: Oh my God.
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Man: Is it pushing you up?
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LM: Yes! I'm not even -- I can't even describe it.
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Man: It's pushing you right up.
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Hugh Herr: Next week, I'm visiting the Center --
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Thank you. Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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Next week I'm visiting the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
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and I'm going to try to convince CMS
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to grant appropriate code language and pricing,
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so this technology can be made available to the patients that need it.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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It's not well appreciated, but over half of the world's population
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suffers from some form of cognitive, emotional, sensory or motor condition,
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and because of poor technology, too often, conditions result in disability
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and a poorer quality of life.
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Basic levels of physiological function should be a part of our human rights.
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Every person should have the right to live life without disability
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if they so choose --
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the right to live life without severe depression;
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the right to see a loved one, in the case of seeing-impaired;
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or the right to walk or to dance,
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in the case of limb paralysis or limb amputation.
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As a society, we can achieve these human rights,
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if we accept the proposition that humans are not disabled.
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A person can never be broken.
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Our built environment, our technologies,
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are broken and disabled.
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We the people need not accept our limitations,
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but can transcend disability through technological innovation.
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Indeed, through fundamental advances in bionics in this century,
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we will set the technological foundation for an enhanced human experience,
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and we will end disability.
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I'd like to finish up with one more story, a beautiful story.
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The story of Adrianne Haslet-Davis.
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Adrianne lost her left leg in the Boston terrorist attack.
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I met Adrianne when this photo was taken, at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.
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Adrianne is a dancer, a ballroom dancer.
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Adrianne breathes and lives dance.
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It is her expression. It is her art form.
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Naturally, when she lost her limb in the Boston terrorist attack,
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she wanted to return to the dance floor.
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After meeting her and driving home in my car,
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I thought, I'm an MIT professor. I have resources.
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Let's build her a bionic limb,
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to enable her to go back to her life of dance.
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I brought in MIT scientists with expertise in prosthetics,
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robotics, machine learning and biomechanics,
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and over a 200-day research period, we studied dance.
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We brought in dancers with biological limbs,
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and we studied how they move,
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what forces they apply on the dance floor,
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and we took those data,
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and we put forth fundamental principles of dance,
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reflexive dance capability,
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and we embedded that intelligence into the bionic limb.
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Bionics is not only about making people stronger and faster.
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Our expression, our humanity can be embedded into electromechanics.
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It was 3.5 seconds between the bomb blasts in the Boston terrorist attack.
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In 3.5 seconds, the criminals and cowards took Adrianne off the dance floor.
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In 200 days, we put her back.
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We will not be intimidated, brought down, diminished, conquered or stopped
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by acts of violence.
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(Applause)
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Ladies and gentlemen, please allow me to introduce Adrianne Haslet-Davis,
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her first performance since the attack.
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She's dancing with Christian Lightner.
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(Applause)
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(Music: "Ring My Bell" performed by Enrique Iglesias)
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(Applause)
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Ladies and gentlemen, members of the research team:
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Elliott Rouse
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and Nathan Villagaray-Carski.
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Elliott and Nathan.
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(Applause)
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