This Glove Fights Hand Tremors

seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from China
seen from Russia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Taiwan

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from China
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Slovakia
seen from Italy
seen from Cayman Islands
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from France
This Glove Fights Hand Tremors
«Умная» перчатка GyroGlove борется с дрожанием рук Идея разработки такой перчатки GyroGlove пришла в голову основателю компании Фаи Онг (Faii Ong) во время работы в лондонской больнице, где врачи никак не могли успокоить дрожание рук у одной из пациенток. Онг вспомнил о гироскопических игрушках из своего детства, подумав, что данную технологию можно использовать, чтобы компенсировать дрожание рук. Так родился проект по созданию «умной» гироскопической перчатки GyroGlove.В настоящее время разработан прототип, который включает в себя электрический гироскоп, установленный на тыльной стороне перчатки. При включении устройство начинает сопротивляться непроизвольным движениям руки, которые возникают при дрожании. При этом у пользователя не должно возникать никаких неудобств.В лабораторных испытаниях, как заявляют разработчики «умной» гироскопической перчатки GyroGlove, удалось добиться уменьшения дрожания рук более чем на 80 процентов.Создатели перчатки уверены, что их разработка поможет людям, страдающим тремором или болезнью Паркинсона, а в будущем, возможно, позволит бороться и с более широким диапазоном расстройств, вызывающих дрожание конечностей. Кроме того, в ближайшем будущем GyroGlove оснастят детектором дрожания, который будет контролировать частоту толчков и передавать данные на смартфон пользователя, чтобы в дальнейшем предоставить их врачам.Компания GyroGear планирует начать принимать заказы на перчатку GyroGlove к концу текущего года, а поставки должны начаться в начале 2017 года.
Перчатки GYROGLOVE помогут устранить тремор
... Читать дальше »
Stabilizing Parkinson’s: The GyroGlove
By Warren Fuller
Parkinson’s disease is a generally awful disorder to suffer through. The disease affects the nervous system, is progressive, and is marked by tremors and muscular rigidity that can severely affect the sufferer’s movements and ability to perform daily tasks. There is currently no cure for Parkinson’s disease, although some medications can stabilize the symptoms. There is however hope for Parkinson’s patients in a new piece of wearable technology currently in development across the pond.
The device, called GyroGlove, was developed by Faii Ong along with other students from Imperial College London. The glove works by using mechanical gyroscopes within the design of the device to resist the wearer’s hand movements with proportional forces. The effect of wearing the GyroGlove has been compared to moving ones hand through a thick syrup or, as this is being developed in London after all, treacle. The resistance offered by the gyroscopes within the glove’s casing has been shown, in lab tests, to reduce the wearer’s tremors by as much as 90%.
The GyroGlove will also be paired with a smartphone app that tracks and documents the wearer’s tremor while the glove is in use. The GyroGlove is, however, still firmly in the prototype stage and there are still a few puzzles that the developers have to solve before the GyroGlove is ready to go into production, for example the fact that battery operated gyroscopes spinning at thousands of RPM are exceptionally noisy and not entirely reliable in the current model. Ong remains confident that these challenges will be solved in time for a September 2016 launch date. The cost of glove will be an estimated $550-$850, although nothing has been set as of yet. Ong hopes that the same gyroscopic concepts may be eventually used to develop wearable tremor dampening devices for other parts of the body, especially the legs, as well.
While cures for diseases and conditions are generally seen as preferable to coping mechanisms, (Oh how we long for Dr. McCoy’s mystery kidney restoration pills from Star Trek IV) the GyroGlove is but one of many human augmentation projects that hope to vastly improve the quality of life of patients for the foreseeable and unforeseeable future, before the cures are found.
How the GyroGlove Steadies Hands of Parkinson’s Patients
When he was a 24-year-old medical student living in London, Faii Ong was assigned to care for a 103-year-old patient who suffered from Parkinson’s, the progressive neurological condition that affects a person’s ease of movement. After watching her struggle to eat a bowl of soup, Ong asked another nurse what more could be done to help the woman. “There’s nothing,” he was grimly told.
GyroGlove’s design is simple. It uses a miniature, dynamically adjustable gyroscope, which sits on the back of the hand, within a plastic casing attached to the glove’s material. When the device is switched on, the battery-powered gyroscope whirs to life. Its orientation is adjusted by a precession[sic] hinge and turntable, both controlled by a small circuit board, thereby pushing back against the wearer’s movements as the gyroscope tries to right itself.
MIT Technology Review
#GyroGlove: Un guante para ayudar a pacientes con el mal de #Parkinson
#GyroGlove: Un guante para ayudar a pacientes con el mal de #Parkinson
https://twitter.com/wwwhatsnew/status/687821022658048001 vía @wwwhatsnew
View On WordPress
GyroGlove: #Wearable Tech Concept for Parkinson’s Disease Patients
Check out this new article on #GyroGlove: #Wearable Tech Concept for Parkinson’s Disease Patients!
There is a #wearable tech concept specifically targeted for Parkinson’s Disease patients called GyroGlove. Here are some quick facts about this product: Gyroglove is a responsive, wearable glove that minimizes hand tremors. The globe stabilizes the wrist joint using gyroscopes and accelerometers. The functionality helps Parkinson’s disease patients perform everyday functions normally (eating and…
View On WordPress