Building Prosthetics for Injured Veterans
Professor Rick Neptune and his mechanical engineering students at the University of Texas at Austin demonstrate how they're paving the way for more customized prosthetics and orthotic devices for injured soldiers.
More From SAE Media Group
Tech Briefs
Building Prosthetics for Injured Veterans
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
3D Printing a Perfectly Fitting Prosthetic Socket
Medical Design Briefs
Sensitive Ceramics for Robotics, Prosthetics
More
Tech Briefs
Neural Hand Prosthesis Control Test
Motion Design INSIDER
Robotic Prosthetic Ankles Improve ‘Natural’ Movement, Stability
Medical Robotics INSIDER
Microfluidic-Based Soft Robotics Promise Relief for Amputees
Medical Design Briefs
Breath-Driven Concept Could Transform Prosthetics
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
Bionic Human Limbs and Humanoid Robots
Medical Design Briefs INSIDER
Thought-Controlled Robotic Arm Mimics Real Limb
Medical Design Briefs
Microfluidic-Based Soft Robotic Prosthetics
Motion Design INSIDER
Making Robotic Assistive Walking More Natural
Medical Design Briefs
Making Lower Limb Prosthetics More Comfortable
Medical Design Briefs
Magnetic Sensors Track Muscle Length
Medical Design Briefs
A Multidisciplinary Approach to Prosthetic Socket Manufacturing
Medical Design Briefs
Bosch Rexroth Opens New Factory Automation Customer Innovation Center
Tech Briefs
Redefining Rehabilitation with Wearable Robotics
Motion Design
Small Shape-Shifting Miniature Robot with Big Impact
Motion Design INSIDER
Inflatable Robotic Hand Gives Amputees Real-Time Tactile Control