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-   -   Meet Rex: the $1m bionic man with working heart, set of lungs and human face (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1098885)

Heath 02-05-2013 09:43 PM

Meet Rex: the $1m bionic man with working heart, set of lungs and human face
 

Quote:

When Luke Skywalker received a perfect bionic replacement for the hand that was cut off in Star Wars Episode V, the idea of replicating human organs and body parts seemed far-fetched.

Thirty years later, the idea is no longer just science fiction. Scientists, among them the creators of ?Rex? ? the world?s most complete bionic man, unveiled in London this week ? believe they can now replicate about two-thirds of the human body.

?We were surprised how many of the parts of the body can be replaced,? said Rich Walker, managing director of the robotics team Shadow, who built Rex. ?There are some vital organs missing, like the stomach, but 60 to 70 per cent of a human has effectively been rebuilt.? This is heralded, then, as the dawn of the age of bionic man ? although specialists caution that we are still feeling our way.

Social psychologist Bertolt Meyer, who also worked on Rex, has an interesting perspective: he was born without his left hand and has a prosthesis. ?I have looked for new bionic technologies out of personal interest for a long time and I think that until five or six years ago nothing much was happening,? he said. ?Suddenly we are at a point where we can build a body that is great and beautiful in its own special way.?

Not everyone in the field believes the recent progress, impressive as it is, places us on the road to complete replication of human limbs, organs and tissue. ?We have motors which can lift things but, if you want to mimic the dexterity of a hand, we are not there yet,? said Professor Steven Hsiao of the John Hopkins University in Baltimore.

?What we are beginning to achieve is building prostheses which look like human body parts, but we are a long way away from making ones which relay sensory information the way the human body does.?
Full article here : http://www.independent.co.uk/news/sc...e-8481943.html

2013 02-05-2013 09:47 PM

http://i.imgur.com/gv0yY.png

SmutHammer 02-05-2013 10:49 PM

Wouldn't stem cell be better?

JFK 02-06-2013 02:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ed Hammer (Post 19466718)
Wouldn't stem cell be better?

probably, but this is a bit less controversial ?:winkwink:


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