embed embed share link link comment comment
Embed This Video close
Share This Video close
bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark bookmark
embed test
Rate This Video embed
0 votes, average: 0.00 out of 50 votes, average: 0.00 out of 50 votes, average: 0.00 out of 50 votes, average: 0.00 out of 50 votes, average: 0.00 out of 5 (0 votes, average: 0.00 out of 5)
You need to be a registered member to rate this post.
Loading ... Loading ...
Tags For This Video tags
rate rate tags tags related related lights lights

MIT-Achieving Better Life Experiences for People with Injury, Disability and Aging Challenges

Imagine a time when technology trumps injury and disease, and the very notion of disability begins to fade. These panelists suggest that we are at the dawn of such an era.

John Hockenberry, who zips around the stage in his flashing light –equipped wheelchair, tells us that “vast, extraordinary and sometimes frightening physical change can instead of being feared … actually be embraced and become an opportunity for people to take authorship of their own lives, using products and tools made by technology to make their life experiences better.” He sees an aging and longer-lived demographic necessitating new and better devices, and the likelihood that such tools may find broader use among a larger, able-bodied population.

Hugh Herr lost both legs below the knee to frostbite while hiking Mt. Washington in 1982. But his drive to climb compelled him to invent replacements that from his perspective far surpass the clumsy, skin-colored prostheses generally available. Herr demonstrates his biomechanical inventions, which provide not only a natural gait but additional energy to each stride – like an airport walkway, he says. Herr believes with some tweaking, his device could help stroke victims walk with better balance, and that the advantage conferred by such a device could make it desirable beyond the disabled population – think physical improvement by way of robotics, rather than steroids. As technology once intended exclusively for disabled people finds wider applications, there will be a transformation, says Herr, which “creates a world where there is not disability, but in fact augmentation. It makes it sexy. It’s the muscle car.”

Dean Kamen performs astonishing pirouettes in his iBOT, a device inspired by his desire to give wheelchair users the same view of the world taken for granted by those able to stand. This machine can give physically challenged people the independence to climb stairs, take a walk in the woods or at the beach.

Kamen also presents, through video clips, breathtaking developments in a robotic artificial arm – the result of U.S. government efforts to fast track (in two years!) a state-of-the-art prosthesis for victims of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nerve and muscle-sensing electrodes enable this arm to pick up small blocks, pieces of paper, and rotate at the wrist. Without government funding, this device would not have been developed, Kamen notes, due to market limitations. Kamen himself subsidizes development of other high tech tools for disabled people (his more lucrative day job involves making insulin pumps and stents). While he’d like these technologies to become “a killer app among people who can pay,” Kamen says, “We will continue to fund them with the naïve notion that it’s the right thing to do, and hope that we will meet our original objective of making the world a better place.”

Leave a Reply

About Us

  • What We Do
  • Press Room
  • Priorities
  • Careers
  • Contact Us
  • Goals
  • Advertising
  • Spread The Word

  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • Twitter
  • Legal Information

  • Terms Of Use
  • Privacy
  • Policies
  • Terms Of Service
  • Report Abuse
  • Copyright Information
  • How Can We Help

  • FAQ's
  • Contact Support
  • Resource Center
  • Copyright @2010 EC Inc.
    All Rights Reserved