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DARPA-funded prosthetic arm reaches phase three, would-be cyborgs celebrate
BY SEAN HOLLISTER
POSTED JUL 18TH 2010 10:47AM

Last we heard from Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory, it wanted a neurally-controlled bionic arm by 2009. Needless to say, the school overshot that goal by a tiny bit, and have now been beaten (twice) to the punch. But DARPA sees $34.5 million worth of promise in their third and final prototype, which will enable the nine pound kit (with 22 degrees of freedom and sensory feedback) to begin clinical trials. Rechristened the Modular Prosthetic Limb, it will be grafted onto as many as five real, live persons, the first within the year. Using the targeted muscle reinnervation technique pioneered at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, patients will control these arms directly with their thoughts, and for their sakes and the fate of humanity, hopefully not the other way around. Press release after the break.
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Hopkins Applied Physics Lab Awarded DARPA Funding to Test Thought-Controlled Prosthetic Limb System

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has awarded a contract for up to $34.5 million to The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md., to manage the development and testing of the Modular Prosthetic Limb (MPL) system on human subjects, using

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Via : Wired
Tags: Modular Prosthetic LimbJohnsHopkinsprosthetic armjohns hopkinsprostheticsProstheticArmTargetedMuscleReinnervationneuralMPLJohnsHopkinsUniversitybionic armModularProstheticLimbJohns Hopkins Universityprosthetic limbsbionicmusclesprosthesisAppliedPhysicsLaboratorymuscletargeted muscle reinnervationprostheticapplied physics laboratoryDARPABionicArmProstheticLimbs
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