Biohacker’s prosthetic arm lets him play a synthesizer with his mind

“For me, it's such a natural thing to do. I don't really have to think about it.”
Sign up for the Freethink Weekly newsletter!
A collection of our favorite stories straight to your inbox

German psychologist Bertolt Meyer was born without his lower left arm, but since 2009, he’s worn an incredibly advanced mind-controlled prosthesis called an iLimb in its place.

Unfortunately, even that cutting-edge device can’t provide Meyer with as much hand dexterity as he wants for creating electronic music, one of his passions.

So, Meyer now occasionally swaps out his bionic hand for a homemade synthesizer controller that he can manipulate using just his thoughts.

Meyer calls his creation the SynLimb, and to understand how it works, you first need to know a bit more about advanced prostheses like the iLimb.

Meyer is able to make adjustments to his synth just by thinking about them.

While controlling anything with your mind might sound like science fiction, myoelectric prostheses aren’t magical — they’re simply a remarkable application of what scientists have been able to figure out about human biology.

If a person with a functioning upper limb wants to move their hand, their brain sends an electrical signal carrying that directive down the muscles in their arm, and their hand moves.

A person missing their lower arm, like Meyer, can still produce that electrical signal. Myoelectric prostheses are designed to receive those signals and convert them into an action that the prosthetic limb can then carry out.

In other words, Meyer can think about picking up a coffee cup the same way someone with a biological hand might, and his iLimb will respond by picking up the cup.


The problem is speed: the iLimb isn’t yet capable of turning the tiny knobs on Meyer’s modular synthesizer as precisely and quickly as he needs it to.

So, with the help of his husband, Daniel Theiler, and Berlin’s KOMA Elektronik, he created the SynLimb, a device that converts the electric signals produced by his brain into commands his modular synthesizer can interpret.

All Meyer has to do is attach the device to his bionic arm in place of his prosthetic hand and connect it to his synthesizer.

Once that’s done, he’s able to make adjustments to his synth just by thinking about them, the same way he could pick up a coffee cup with his prosthetic arm just by thinking about the action.

“For me, it’s such a natural thing to do. I don’t really have to think about it. I just do it,” Meyer explained in a YouTube video. “It’s zero effort because I’m so used to producing this muscle signal. For me, this feels like I’m controlling the (synthesizer) filter with my thoughts.”

Meyer’s SynLimb is still very much in the prototype stage — it doesn’t even have an enclosure, meaning he basically looks like he’s wearing the inside of a computer on the end of his arm when using the device.

But as Meyer notes in the video, this is just the first step, and he plans to continue developing his SynLimb, pushing the boundaries of what’s possible when he puts his mind to it.

Related
Ray Kurzweil explains how AI makes radical life extension possible
Life expectancy gains in developed countries have slowed in recent decades, but AI may be poised to transform medicine as we know it.
MIT engineers design flexible “skeletons” for soft, muscle-powered robots
New modular, spring-like devices maximize the work of live muscle fibers so they can be harnessed to power biohybrid bots.
New AI music generator makes songs from text prompts
AI music generators — AIs that create new music based on users’ text prompts — are lowering the bar for music creation, for better or worse.
Man feels hot and cold again with prosthetic hand breakthrough
Researchers have built a device that helps users feel temperature through a prosthetic arm. A new study shows it works with high accuracy.
Up Next
biohacking
Subscribe to Freethink for more great stories