Wednesday, November 27, 2019

A Prosthetic Arm Bangs the Drums

A Prosthetic Arm Bangs the Drums A Prosthetic Arm Bangs the Drums A Prosthetic Arm Bangs the DrumsJason Barnes had dreamed of being a professional drummer since he was a teenager. But when he lost part of his right obere extremitt in a workplace accident at the age of 22, that goal was put in jeopardy.Barnes didnt give up. After the accident, he built himself a homemade prosthetic drumstick unfortunately that tool didnt give him the control he needed to play at a professional level. Then he teamed up with Gil raabstick, a professor in Georgia Techs School of Music and the founding director of the Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology.We got a call from somebody who said one of his students lost his hand and is looking for a myoelectric robotic arm that would allow him to control and play music, almost like a wrist that he didnt have any more, says Weinberg, who is also a musician himself and an inventor of experimental musical instruments.For You Sensors Allow Robots to Feel Sensa tionGil Weinberg (left) developed a prosthetic that enabled Jason Barnes (right) to play drums again. Image Georgia TechTogether they made prosthetics that enable Barnes to continue making music. Not only can he drum, but he can also play the piano and the guitar. For more than a decade, Weinberg had been developing robotic musicians that performed as separate entitiesthat is, not attached to the body.The idea was to have artificial creativity algorithms driving these robots, says Weinberg. They listen like human, understand rhythm and beat, but when they improvise they use genetic algorithms to create music. One of his most popular robots has been Shimon, a marimba-playing robot that uses artificial intelligence and creativity algorithms to listen to, understand, and collaborate with human musicians.The doomsayers talk about robots taking away your jobs, and here is one example where the human wont have a job without robotics.Prof. Gil Weinberg, Georgia TechThe goal for Barnes was different. Although it is possible to drum with only one armnotably, drummer Rick Allen continued performing for the rock group Def Leppard after a 1984 car accident took his left armBarnes wanted a prosthetic that would allow him to play drums very quickly and with great accuracy.Since he wanted the capability to flex and relax his muscle so that he can control the type of stick thats being held, we put electomyographic sensors on the muscle, to make it tighter or looser, Weinberg says. The hardware in the arm, according to Weinberg, uses two motors to boost dexterity and speed. The software includes a genetic algorithm, nerven betreffend network, and deep learning to convert the signals from Barness muscles into movement of the drumsticks.The success Barnes had with his prosthetic prompted Weinbergs team to build an auxiliary arm that attaches to the shoulder and is controlled via brain signals. They have also used similar AI techniques to develop a prosthetics hand dexterous enou gh to enable Barnes to play the piano.This technology can be used for anything that requires finger-to-finger dexterous control, says Weinberg, who hopes to commercialize it. The human-robot collaboration has been life-changing for Barnes, who is now a traveling musician. He has performed on stage, including at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, and internationally.The doomsayers talk about robots taking away your jobs, Weinberg says, and here is one example where the human wont have a job without robotics.Hear More Listen to the first episode of ASME TechCast Building the Case for a Diversified Workforce For Further Discussion

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