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Synthetic Sensations
04 November 2015

Synthetic Sensations

Which of these hands – human or robot – can feel the other? The answer is both. The robotic hand is wearing a flexible, electronic skin that can detect pressure and translate it into digital signals, just like nerve impulses. Gentle pressure, like this light handshake, fires the signals at low speed, but a firm grip increases the signal frequency. Detecting pressure digitally, however, was a mere first step for the researchers that developed the skin. Next, they wired it up to actual living brain cells. Using an electronic chip to convert the digital signals into light pulses transmitted by optic fibre, the team stimulated mouse neurons engineered to be light responsive. Sure enough, the brain cells fired in accordance with the light pulse frequency, which depended on the pressure applied to the skin. The hope is that such technology might one day provide a sense of touch to wearers of prostheses.

Written by Ruth Williams

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BPoD stands for Biomedical Picture of the Day. Managed by the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences until Jul 2023, it is now run independently by a dedicated team of scientists and writers. The website aims to engage everyone, young and old, in the wonders of biology, and its influence on medicine. The ever-growing archive of more than 4000 research images documents over a decade of progress. Explore the collection and see what you discover. Images are kindly provided for inclusion on this website through the generosity of scientists across the globe.

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