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Part 5: Using the Brain to Move a Robotic Arm

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This is the VOA Special English Technology Report.

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Cathy Hutchinson is a tetraplegic.

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She has not been able to move her arms, legs or speak since suffering a stroke nearly fifteen years ago.

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Recently, she learned how to control a robotic arm using her thoughts.

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She now can use brain activity to serve herself a drink.

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The American woman is one of two people who took part in a research project known as BrainGate2.

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The researchers have spent years studying how to help people who are paralyzed regain movement in their arms and legs.

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John Donoghue was part of the project.

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He is a neuroscientist with Brown University and the Department of Veterans Affairs.

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He says people who are paralyzed have their brain disconnected from their body.

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So he and other researchers decided to go around the damaged nervous system.

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They developed a way to go directly from the brain to the outside world.

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The two paralyzed people had small sensors connected to the part of the brain that controls movement.

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The devices measured brain activity and sent that information to a computer.

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The computer has special software that turns the information into digital commands for operating other devices.

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The researchers used a highly developed robotic arm to recreate human actions.

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Scientists from Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the German Aerospace Center also took part in the study.

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The BrainGate team had its first success in two thousand six.

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A tetraplegic stabbing victim was able to use the brain-computer interface system to control a computer cursor.

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John Donoghue says the latest development using robotic arms is a major victory.

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A video of the experiment shows Cathy Hutchinson using such an arm to pick up a cup of coffee.

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She guides the cup toward her mouth, moves it forward and drinks through a straw.

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The research team carried out almost two hundred tests with two different robotic arms.

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The two individuals were able to pick up their target objects forty-three to sixty-six percent of the time.

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The researchers are calling the information very promising.

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But they say it will take years to fully develop the technology for everyday use.

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A report on the BrainGate study appeared in the scientific journal Nature.

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For VOA Special English, I'm Carolyn Presutti.

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To read, listen and learn English with our stories, go to voaspecialenglish.com.