Magnetomicrometry
Author(s)
Taylor, Cameron R; Srinivasan, S. S.; Yeon, Seong Ho; O’Donnell, MK; Roberts, TJ; Herr, Hugh M; ... Show more Show less
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We live in an era of wearable sensing, where our movement through the world can be continuously monitored by devices. Yet, we lack a portable sensor that can continuously monitor muscle, tendon, and bone motion, allowing us to monitor performance, deliver targeted rehabilitation, and provide intuitive, reflexive control over prostheses and exoskeletons. Here, we introduce a sensing modality, magnetomicrometry, that uses the relative positions of implanted magnetic beads to enable wireless tracking of tissue length changes. We demonstrate real-time muscle length tracking in an in vivo turkey model via chronically implanted magnetic beads while investigating accuracy, biocompatibility, and long-term implant stability. We anticipate that this tool will lay the groundwork for volitional control over wearable robots via real-time tracking of muscle lengths and speeds. Further, to inform future biomimetic control strategies, magnetomicrometry may also be used in the in vivo tracking of biological tissues to elucidate biomechanical principles of animal and human movement.
Date issued
2021Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Extreme Bionics; Program in Media Arts and Sciences (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)Journal
Science Robotics
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Citation
Taylor, CR, Srinivasan, SS, Yeon, SH, O’Donnell, MK, Roberts, TJ et al. 2021. "Magnetomicrometry." Science Robotics, 6 (57).
Version: Author's final manuscript