| Literature DB >> 31620665 |
Loredana Zollo1, Giovanni Di Pino2, Vincenzo Denaro3, Eugenio Guglielmelli1, Anna L Ciancio1, Federico Ranieri4, Francesca Cordella1, Cosimo Gentile1, Emiliano Noce1, Rocco A Romeo1, Alberto Dellacasa Bellingegni1, Gianluca Vadalà3, Sandra Miccinilli5, Alessandro Mioli2, Lorenzo Diaz-Balzani3, Marco Bravi5, Klaus-P Hoffmann6, Andreas Schneider6, Luca Denaro7, Angelo Davalli8, Emanuele Gruppioni8, Rinaldo Sacchetti8, Simona Castellano8, Vincenzo Di Lazzaro4, Silvia Sterzi5.
Abstract
Despite previous studies on the restoration of tactile sensation on the fingers and the hand, there are no examples of use of the routed sensory information to finely control the prosthesis hand in complex grasp and manipulation tasks. Here it is shown that force and slippage sensations can be elicited in an amputee subject by means of biologically-inspired slippage detection and encoding algorithms, supported by a stick-slip model of the performed grasp. A combination of cuff and intraneural electrodes was implanted for eleven weeks in a young woman with hand amputation, and was shown to provide close-to-natural force and slippage sensations, paramount for significantly improving the subject's manipulative skills with the prosthesis. Evidence is provided about the improvement of the subject's grasping and manipulation capabilities over time, thanks to neural feedback. The elicited tactile sensations enabled the successful fulfillment of fine grasp and manipulation tasks with increasing complexity. Grasp performance was quantitatively assessed by means of instrumented objects and a purposely developed metrics. Closed-loop control capabilities enabled by the neural feedback were compared to those achieved without feedback. Further, the work investigates whether the described amelioration of motor performance in dexterous tasks had as central neurophysiological correlates changes in motor cortex plasticity and whether such changes were of purely motor origin, or else the effect of a strong and persistent drive of the sensory feedback.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31620665 PMCID: PMC6795534 DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.aau9924
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Robot ISSN: 2470-9476