Assistive Robotic Hand Augmentation during temporary immobilisation

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

Abstract

Hand function is crucial for almost every aspect of daily life, and even temporary impairment can have massive financial and societal implications on both patients independence and employment. The UK is currently estimated to sustain an annual incident rate of 68,000 temporary arm immobilisation cases due to orthopaedic injury, with a projection for a significant increase due to fragility fractures which are particularly impacting the rising older population. Unlike lower-limb assistive options, such as wheelchairs and crutches, there are currently no assistive technologies for temporary upper-limb immobilisation. We seek to target this unmet clinical need and offer a radically different approach to existing options for improving functionality following hand injury. To intelligently meet patient needs while supporting healing and rehabilitation of the affected hand, we propose to increase the functionality of the non-damaged hand during the immobilisation period. During the injury's acute phase, mobilising the injured hand will be painful and impractical. Thus, augmenting the unimpaired hand will immediately enhance functionality to help alleviate temporary disability. This will be done via motor augmentation using a supernumerary robotic device called the Third Thumb, developed by the project contributor Dani Clode Design.

As an extra thumb prosthetic specifically designed to extend the motor abilities of an already fully functional hand, this device allows people to carry out complex daily tasks that normally require bimanual coordination. The project benefits from foundational evidence of our initial research on the neural basis of hand augmentation in healthy participants. We demonstrated that the Third Thumb device allows intuitive control, high levels of embodiment, basic levels of functionality for a lay user with minimal training (<10 minutes), and increased levels of dexterity and motor control with additional customised training. The proposed research project will prepare the development and clinical translation of this unique and easily implemented assistive technology to improve the independence of patients undergoing temporary immobilisation. In collaboration with clinical partners, we will assess the feasibility and safety of this assistive technology by providing a first bespoke prototype.

To ensure patient satisfaction and a feasible implementation of our assistive technology, we will first develop a better understanding of user-experience, by documenting the daily needs of our patient group and by assessing initial device control in a broad and diverse group of naïve users. We will translate the knowledge gained through user-experience analysis into actionable insights for assistive technical development, with the aim to create a prototype tailored to our target population's diverse needs. To enhance motor capabilities, we will develop at-home training protocols for potential users to adapt according to their individual needs, to maximise their independence. Next, we will run a longitudinal trial to generate evidence for the device's safety and successful integration in healthy participants, with emphasis on the experience of 'embodiment'. Here, we will examine potential neural biomarkers for device embodiment and address possible 'side effects' of Thumb intensive use, to ensure its implementation as assistive technology is effective and risk-free. Finally, we will introduce and document Thumb use in individual patients with more complex needs (teenagers and older women) to provide a pre-clinical proof-of-concept for fluent control under dynamic real-life challenges. With our holistic approach, we aim to provide a bespoke solution to a largely unmet clinical need, with the potential to radically improve the daily functionality of the millions of individuals who experience transient hand disabilities annually around the world.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Observatory for Human Machine Collaboration
Amount £35,000 (GBP)
Organisation University of Cambridge 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start  
 
Description EPSRC Collaborations 
Organisation Royal Free Hospital
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Hospitals 
PI Contribution Academic contribution as well as data collection/analysis.
Collaborator Contribution Giulia Dominijanni (EPFL): Electronic Engineer, helped with study design and data collection/analysis. Dani Clode: Designer of the Third Thumb. Anthea Davy (UCLH): Hand and wrist surgeon, consultant for application of augmentative robotic technologies to clinical populations. Juliette Bray (Royal Free Hospital): Physiotherapist and consultant for application of augmentative robotic technologies to clinical populations.
Impact Ongoing collaboration with Giulia Dominijanni and Dani Clode that uses augmentative robotics to study brain plasticity in the somatosensory area. The collaboration is multidisciplinary, involving elements of Engineering, Design and Neurocognitive Science.
Start Year 2022
 
Description EPSRC Collaborations 
Organisation Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)
Country Switzerland 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution Academic contribution as well as data collection/analysis.
Collaborator Contribution Giulia Dominijanni (EPFL): Electronic Engineer, helped with study design and data collection/analysis. Dani Clode: Designer of the Third Thumb. Anthea Davy (UCLH): Hand and wrist surgeon, consultant for application of augmentative robotic technologies to clinical populations. Juliette Bray (Royal Free Hospital): Physiotherapist and consultant for application of augmentative robotic technologies to clinical populations.
Impact Ongoing collaboration with Giulia Dominijanni and Dani Clode that uses augmentative robotics to study brain plasticity in the somatosensory area. The collaboration is multidisciplinary, involving elements of Engineering, Design and Neurocognitive Science.
Start Year 2022
 
Description EPSRC Collaborations 
Organisation University College Hospital
Department University College London Hospitals Charity (UCLH)
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution Academic contribution as well as data collection/analysis.
Collaborator Contribution Giulia Dominijanni (EPFL): Electronic Engineer, helped with study design and data collection/analysis. Dani Clode: Designer of the Third Thumb. Anthea Davy (UCLH): Hand and wrist surgeon, consultant for application of augmentative robotic technologies to clinical populations. Juliette Bray (Royal Free Hospital): Physiotherapist and consultant for application of augmentative robotic technologies to clinical populations.
Impact Ongoing collaboration with Giulia Dominijanni and Dani Clode that uses augmentative robotics to study brain plasticity in the somatosensory area. The collaboration is multidisciplinary, involving elements of Engineering, Design and Neurocognitive Science.
Start Year 2022
 
Description EPSRC 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact January 2023 - Hard Rest, FreeThink Documentary. 500k+ views (Recording)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.freethink.com/series/hard-reset/bionic-third-thumb
 
Description EPSRC 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact New Scientist, (Pre-recorded interview with Dani Clode) - 16k views (July 2022),
BBC Radio Cambridge (Live interview with Dani Clode) (October 2022)
Publication of a press article 'Helping the body and brain to welcome bionic limbs and implants', in Horizon (Magazine).
Feature in the MIT Technology Review (USA, 2023);
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022,2023
 
Description EPSRC - Events and exhibitions 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact July 2022 - Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition. 6,000+ visitors (in-person exhibition)
August 2022 - Deutsches Technikmuseum, (German Museum of Technology) Berlin Lates event (in-person exhibition and talk by Dani Clode)
October 2022 - Science Museum London Lates, 3000+ visitors (in-person exhibition)
November 2022 - Bold Community Exhibition in Lisbon (in-person exhibition
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022,2023
 
Description EPSRC - Invited Talks 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Invited talks to the following events/locations:
Tamar Makin: Johns Hopkins Neurology Ground Round, USA; EPSRC Workshop on Soft Robotics for Mixed Reality, University of Cambridge, UK; 13th scientific day of the IRM-INT center, France (Keynote speaker); MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit Chaucer Seminar, UK; Cambridge Engineering Control Group Seminar, UK; University of Cambridge Engineering Department Bioengineering Conference, UK; ICRA workshop on supernumerary limbs, UK

Dani Clode:
- October 2022 - Ai/Augmented Intelligence at Work Symposium, conference presentation, Hannover Germany (In-person talk)
- October 2022 - Formlabs User Summit 2022. Building Better Wearables: Understanding the Intersections Between Biology, Technology, and Design (Pre-recorded talk)
- March 2023 - The New School, New York - Assistive, Augmentative and Adaptive: Considerations for Designing the Future Body (In person presentation)
- March 2023 - AAAS (Short Talk and Panel discussion)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022,2023