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People with paralysis can stand and move without a wheelchair. They can
operate computers to read email and play video games. Brown University
neuroscientist John Donoghue said these recent achievements are
previews of a major promise of neurotechnology – restoring movement
control and communication to people immobilized by injury or disease.
“We’re at the dawn of a new age of neurotechnology,” Donoghue said.
“Thanks to advances in biology, medicine, computer science and
engineering, we can repair the human nervous system – not with tissue
but with technology. Nearly 100,000 people have cochlear implants that
provide a sense of sound to the deaf. Retinal implants are in
development to restore sight to the blind. And there several systems
being created that will help people living with paralysis. Someday,
using their own muscles, people with paralysis will be able to feed
themselves or perhaps even walk. These electronic devices will allow
them to lead more independent lives.”
Donoghue will discuss the fast-growing field of neuroprosthetics at
a Feb. 15, 2007, press briefing at the annual meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the world’s largest
general scientific society. At the meeting, held in San Francisco,
Donoghue will take part in a symposium titled “Smart Prosthetics:
Interfaces to the Nervous System Help Restore Independence.”
Donoghue, the Henry Merritt Wriston Professor at Brown and director
of the University’s Brain Science Program, is a leader in
neuroprosthesis research and development. At the press briefing and in
the symposium, he will give an overview of brain-computer interfaces
(BCIs) – systems that create a direct communication pathway between the
brain and an external device such as a computer or a wheelchair.
One example of a BCI is BrainGate, the mind-to-movement system that
got its start in the Donoghue laboratory at Brown. BrainGate consists
of an implantable sensor and external processors that record and
interpret brain signals from the motor cortex, turning the brain’s
electrical signals into movement commands that can control assistive
devices.
The BrainGate system has allowed people with paralysis to operate a
computer in order to read e-mail, control a wheelchair and operate a
robotic hand in FDA-approved pilot clinical trials. Donoghue oversees
the trials in his role as chief scientific officer of Cyberkinetics
Neurotechnology Systems Inc., the Foxborough, Mass., company developing
and testing the technology.
Donoghue is also working with symposium organizer P. Hunter
Peckham, a professor of biomedical engineering and orthopaedics at Case
Western Reserve University, to develop a neuroprosthetic system that
can restore partial arm and hand function to people with paralysis.
The system will connect the BrainGate sensor with Peckham’s
functional electrical stimulation (FES) system, which uses electrical
impulses to trigger muscle and limb movement. The first version will
allow users to make simple movements that could be used to perform
tasks such as eating or drinking – using their own arms and hands and
under the natural control of their own brains. The initial version of
this FES system would use arm supports. Later versions, however, won’t
require supports – and will allow users to do activities that require
more dexterity, such as using cell phones or remote controls.
Donoghue and Peckham will complete a prototype within four years
under a contract with the National Center for Medical Rehabilitation
Research at the National Institutes of Health.
“This system will represent a quantum leap in rehabilitation
technology,” Donoghue said, “and it will fundamentally alter the lives
of people with spinal cord injury.”
Source: Brown University