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How we'll become cyborgs and extend human potential

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    I'm an MIT professor,
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    but I do not design buildings
    or computer systems.
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    Rather, I build body parts:
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    bionic legs that augment
    human walking and running.
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    In 1982, I was in
    a mountain climbing accident,
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    and both of my legs had to be amputated
    due to tissue damage from frostbite.
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    Here you can see my legs:
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    24 censors, six microprocessors,
    and muscle-tendon-like actuators.
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    I'm basically a bunch of nuts
    and bolts from the knee down.
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    But with this advanced bionic technology,
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    I can skip, dance, and run.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    I'm a bionic man,
    but I'm not yet a cyborg.
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    When I think about moving my legs,
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    neural signals from
    my central nervous system
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    pass through my nerves
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    and activate muscles
    within my residual limbs.
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    Artificial electrodes sense these signals,
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    and small computers in the bionic limb
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    decode my nerve pulses
    into my intended movement patterns.
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    Stated simply,
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    when I think about moving,
    that command is communicated
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    to the synthetic part of my body.
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    However, those computers can't input
    information into my nervous system.
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    When I touch and move my synthetic limbs,
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    I do not experience normal
    touch and movement sensations.
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    If I were a cyborg
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    and could feel my legs
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    via small computers inputting information
    into my nervous system,
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    it would fundamentally change,
    I believe, my relationship
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    to my synthetic body.
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    Today I can't feel my legs,
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    and because that, my legs
    are separate tools
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    from my mind and my body.
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    They're not part of me.
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    I believe that if I were a cyborg
    and could feel my legs,
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    they would become
    part of me, part of self.
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    At MIT, we're thinking about
    neural and body design.
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    In this design process,
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    the designer designs human flesh and bone,
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    the biological body itself
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    along with synthetics
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    to enhance the bidirectional communication
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    between the nervous system
    and the built world.
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    Neuron body design is a methodology
    to create cyborg function.
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    In this design process,
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    designers contemplate a future
    in which technology
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    no longer compromises separate,
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    lifeless tools from
    our minds and our bodies,
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    a future in which technology
    has been carefully integrated
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    within our nature,
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    a world in which what
    is biological and what is not,
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    what is human and what is not,
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    what is nature and what is not,
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    will be forever blurred.
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    That future will provide
    humanity new bodies.
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    Neuron body design will extend
    our nervous systems
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    into the synthetic world,
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    and the synthetic world into us,
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    fundamentally changing who we are.
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    By designing the biological body
    to better communicate
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    with the built design world,
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    humanity will end disability
    in this 21st century
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    and establish the scientific
    and technological basis
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    for human augmentation,
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    extending human capability
    beyond innate, physiological levels,
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    cognitively, emotionally, and physically.
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    There are many ways in which
    to build new bodies across scale,
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    from the biomolecular
    to the scale of tissues and organs.
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    Today, I want to talk about
    one area of neural and body design
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    in which the body's tissues
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    are manipulated and sculpted
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    using surgical and regenerative processes.
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    The current amputation paradigm
    hasn't changed fundamentally
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    since the US Civil War
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    and has grown obsolete
    in light of dramatic advancements
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    in actuators, control systems,
    and neural interfacing technologies.
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    A major deficiency is the lack
    of dynamic muscle interactions
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    for control and proprioception.
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    What is proprioception?
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    When you flex your ankle,
    muscles in the front of your leg contract,
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    simultaneously stressing muscles
    in the back of your leg.
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    The opposite happens
    when you extend your ankle.
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    Here, muscles in the back
    of your leg contract,
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    stretching muscles in the front.
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    When these muscles flex and extend,
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    biological sensors
    within the muscle tendons
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    send information
    through nerves to the brain.
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    This is how we're able to feel
    where our feet are without seeing them
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    with our eyes.
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    The current amputation paradigm
    breaks these dynamic muscle relationships,
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    and in so doing eliminates
    normal proprioceptive sensations.
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    Consequently, a standard artificial limb
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    cannot feed back information
    into the nervous system
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    about where the prosthesis is in space.
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    The patient therefore
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    cannot sense and feel the positions
    and movements of the prosthetic joint
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    without seeing it with their eyes.
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    My legs were amputated
    using a Civil War-era methodology.
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    I can feel my feet,
    I can feel them right now
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    as a phantom awareness,
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    but when I try to move them, I cannot.
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    It feels like they're stuck
    inside rigid ski boots.
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    To solve these problems at MIT,
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    we invented the Agonist-antagonist
    Myoneural Interface,
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    or AMI for short.
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    The AMI is a method to connect nerves
    within the residuum
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    to an external, bionic prosthesis.
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    How is the AMI designed,
    and how does it work?
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    The AMI comprises two muscles
    that are surgically connected,
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    an agonist linked to an antagonist.
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    When the agonist contracts
    upon electrical activation,
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    it stretches the antagonist.
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    This muscle dynamic interaction
    causes biological sensors
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    within the muscle tendon
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    to send information through the nerve
    to the central nervous system,
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    relating information
    on the muscle tendon's
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    length, speed and force.
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    This is how muscle tendon
    proprioception works,
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    and it's the primary way we, as humans,
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    can feel and sense the positions,
    movements and forces on our limbs.
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    When a limb is amputated, the surgeon
    connects these opposing muscles
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    within the residuum to create an AMI.
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    Now, multiple AMI
    constructs can be created
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    for the control and sensation
    of multiple prosthetic joints.
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    Artificial electrodes are then placed
    on each AMI muscle,
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    and small computers within the bionic limb
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    decode those signals
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    to control powerful motors
    on the bionic limb.
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    When the bionic limb moves,
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    the AMI muscles move back and forth,
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    sending signals through
    the nerve to the brain,
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    enabling a person wearing the prosthesis
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    to experience natural sensations
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    of positions and movements
    of the prosthesis.
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    Can these tissue design principles
    be used in an actual human being?
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    A few years ago, my good friend Jim Ewing
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    of 34 years reached out to me for help.
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    Jim was in an a terrible
    climbing accident.
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    He fell 50 feet in the Cayman Islands,
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    and his rope failed to catch him,
    hitting the ground's surface.
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    He suffered many, many injuries:
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    punctured lungs and many broken bones.
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    After his accident, he dreamed
    of returning to his chosen sport
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    of mountain climbing,
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    but how might this be possible?
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    The answer was Team Cyborg,
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    a team of surgeons,
    scientists and engineers
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    assembled at MIT to rebuild Jim
    back to his former climbing prowess.
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    Team member Dr. Matthew Carney
    amputated Jim's badly damaged leg
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    Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston
    using the AMI surgical procedure.
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    Tendon pulleys were created
    and attached to Jim's tibia bone
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    to reconnect the opposing muscles.
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    The AMI procedure
    reestablished the neural link
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    between Jim's ankle-foot
    muscles and his brain.
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    When Jim moves his phantom limb,
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    the reconnected muscles move
    in dynamic pairs,
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    causing signals to pass through nerves
    of proprioception to the brain,
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    so Jim experiences normal sensations
    with ankle-foot positions and movements
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    even when blindfolded.
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    Here's Jim at the MIT laboratory
    after his surgeries.
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    We electrically linked Jim's AMI muscles
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    via the electrodes to a bionic limb,
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    and Jim quickly learned
    how to move the bionic limb
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    in four distinct ankle-foot
    movement directions.
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    We were excited by these results,
    but then Jim stood up,
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    and what occurred was truly remarkable.
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    All the natural biomechanics
    mediated by the central nervous system
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    emerged via the synthetic limb
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    as an involuntary, reflexive action.
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    All the intricacies of foot placement,
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    thank you, during stair ascent
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    (Applause)
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    emerged before our eyes.
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    Here's Jim descending steps,
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    reaching with his bionic toe
    to the next stair tread,
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    automatically exhibiting natural motions
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    without him even trying to move his limb.
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    Because Jim's central nervous system
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    is receiving the proprioceptive signals,
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    it knows exactly how to control
    the synthetic limb in a natural way.
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    Now, Jim moves and behaves
    as if the synthetic limb is part of him.
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    For example, one day in lab,
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    he accidentally stepped
    on a roll of electric tape.
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    Now, what do you do
    when something's stuck to your shoe?
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    You don't reach down like this.
    It's way too awkward.
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    Instead you shake it off,
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    and that's exactly what Jim did
    after being neurally connected to the limb
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    for just a few hours.
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    What was most interesting to me
    is what Jim was telling us
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    he was experiencing.
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    He said, "The robot became part of me."
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    Jim Ewing: The morning after the first
    time I was attached to the robot,
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    my daughter came downstairs
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    and asked me how it felt to be a cyborg,
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    and my answer was that
    I didn't feel like a cyborg.
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    I felt like I had my leg,
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    and it wasn't that I was
    attached to the robot
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    so much as the robot was attached to me,
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    and the robot became a part of me.
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    It became my leg pretty quickly.
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    Hugh Herr: Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    By connecting Jim's
    nervous system bidirectionally
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    to his synthetic limb,
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    neurological embodiment was achieved.
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    I hypothesized that because Jim can think
    and move his synthetic limb,
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    and because he can feel those movements
    within his nervous system,
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    the prosthesis is no longer
    a separate tool
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    but an integral part of Jim,
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    an integral part of his body.
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    Because of this neurological embodiment,
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    Jim doesn't feel like a cyborg.
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    He feels like he just has his leg back,
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    that he has his body back.
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    Now I'm often asked when I'm
    going to be neurally linked
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    to my synthetic limbs bidirectionally,
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    when I'm going to become a a cyborg.
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    The truth is, I'm hesitant
    to become a cyborg.
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    Before my legs were amputated,
    I was a terrible student.
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    I got D's and often F's in school.
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    And then after my limbs were amputated,
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    I suddenly became an MIT professor.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Now I'm worried that once I'm neurally
    connected to my legs once again,
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    my brain will remap back
    to its not-so-bright self.
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    But you know what, that's okay,
    because at MIT I already have tenure.
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    (Laughter)
    (Applause)
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    I believe the reach
    of neural and body design
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    will extend far beyond limb replacement
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    and will carry humanity
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    into realms that fundamentally
    redefine human potential.
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    In this 21st century,
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    designers will extend the nervous system
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    into powerfully strong exoskeletons
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    that humans can control
    and feel with their minds.
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    Muscles within the body
    can be reconfigured
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    for the control of powerful motors,
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    and to feel and sense
    exoskeletal movements,
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    augmenting humans' strength,
    jumping height, and running speed.
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    In this 21st century, I believe humans
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    will become superheroes.
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    Humans may also extend their bodies
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    into non-anthropomorphic
    structures, such as wings,
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    controlling and feeling each wing movement
    within the nervous system.
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    Leonardo da Vinci said,
    "When once you have tasted flight,
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    you will forever walk the earth
    with your eyes turned skyward,
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    for then you have been
    and there you will always long to return."
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    During the twilight years of this century,
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    I believe humans will be unrecognizable
    in morphology and dynamics
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    from what we are today.
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    Humanity will take flight and soar.
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    Jim Ewing fell to earth
    and was badly broken,
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    but his eyes turned skyward
    where he always longed to return.
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    After his accident, he not only
    dreamed to walk again,
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    but also to return to his chosen sport
    of mountain climbing.
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    At MIT, Team Cyborg built Jim
    a specialized limb for the vertical world,
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    a brain-controlled leg with full position
    and movement sensations.
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    Using this technology, Jim returned
    to the Cayman Islands,
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    the site of his accident,
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    rebuilt as a cyborg
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    to climb skyward once again.
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    (Crashing waves)
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Ladies and gentlemen, Jim Ewing,
    the first cyborg rock climber.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How we'll become cyborgs and extend human potential
Speaker:
Hugh Herr
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:13

English subtitles

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