Practice for your bionic hand with Virtu-limb
Rock, paper, scissors, anyone?
(Credit:
Touch Bionics)
In the future, we’ll all have cyborg bodies with replaceable parts, right? The transition to immortality, though, may take some getting used to. Touch Bionics has a handy new tool to help us practice.
The Scottish maker of the i-Limb Pulse bionic hand is showing off its new Virtu-limb, a tool it describes as “a groundbreaking simulation and training product for myoelectric upper limb prostheses.”
Showcased at this week’s American Orthotic & Prosthetic Association National Assembly in Las Vegas, the Virtu-limb consists of electrodes that pick up electrical signals in arm muscles and a dock for a prosthetic hand that links wirelessly to a PC. It can also be used without the prosthesis.
When a user flexes his or her muscles, the movements are reproduced in a virtual 3D hand on a screen, or in a real i-Limb Pulse, which the company recently renamed i-Limb Ultra.