Transcript
yLOOfddvf84 • Building Stuff: Brilliant Inventions to Boost Human Abilities | Full Documentary | NOVA | PBS
/home/itcorpmy/itcorp.my.id/harry/yt_channel/out/novapbs/.shards/text-0001.zst#text/1007_yLOOfddvf84.txt
Kind: captions Language: en [Music] we live in a built World engineering and Technology built upon Innovations and inventions stretching back thousands of years some of our Creations like machines boost our body's abilities others help us reach outside our comfort zones we have left an indelible mark on the planet and now the time has come to use our skills to make a better world like turbocharging the ancient sling the idea is 50,000 years old to launch satellites in a way we've never done before a device that boosts our sense of touch to share a dance I felt I was moving along with you begin or Aid in movement a machine to boost a human experience and inspire a new generation oh my gosh so good or even recreating a sense good to go to replace something that was lost that was the first time in years that I had a sensation a vision building stuff boost it right now on Nova [Music] as an american-based supplier to the construction industry car is committed to developing a diverse workplace that supports our employees advancement into the next generation of leaders from the manufacturing floor to the front office learn more at carle.com [Music] Earth is home to more than 8 billion people living in a world full of human invention certainly in our modern world we don't really appreciate how saturated with engineering it is every pen you pick up to write something with has been engineered the paper on which you write has been engineered humans are engineers at heart you see a problem and then you identify a solution and we've been doing that forever this thing we call engineering what is it where does this impulse to make things come from anthropologists tell us that the roots of invention reach deeper into our past than we ever imagined according to our best records some 3.3 million years ago our ancestors figured out how to sharpen a certain kind of rock Rock creating a tool for cutting much better than our teeth boosting the chances for survival humans dating Way Way Back In Time have been inventing things that help efficiency that help their survival that help drive them forward based on the needs of that time it's a innate desire to make things better through making tools and ever since one idea has led to another and every invention around us today can be traced back to those first [Music] tools we have a cut off at tus 30 seconds since the 1950 Rockets have been our go-to Workhorse for sending people and payloads into orbit they are some of the most complex machines ever built the ultimate boost into the sky but they aren't exactly new even modern rockets have historic Roots going back in time some ancient projectiles were powered by chemical explosives like gunpowder in 1232 Chinese soldiers repelled a Mongol Army using flaming arrows likely propelled by simple Rockets today Rockets are far more powerful able to send humans to the moon and the International Space Station solid rocket ignition but Rockets have limitations putting things in orbit is hard it takes a lot of energy Rockets are hard they take a lot of energy basically the amount of fuel required for Rockets to reach you know the outer reach of our atmosphere is the limiting factor something like 92 93% of the mass of any rocket is is fuel leaving about five or 6% for the actual structure and only 2% for the payload there is a high demand to put things into space but there are limited means of getting it there but that may soon change if engineers at a company called spin launch can make the dream imagined in this promotional video a reality spin launch is a highly unique way to get to space the idea itself goes back to caveman times it's a sling a sling is an ancient Hunter's weapon it's an improvement on on the arm and shoulder's ability to throw a stone archaeologists have found ancient evidence of slings some at least 12,000 years old for Jonathan yany the sling is an inspiration it rotates and at the end of a rotational element you have really really high speed so Jonathan embraced a radical idea use that speed to launch a spacecraft into orbit a sling is something you spin around and basically the more you can spin it the more Force you can basically put on the release of whatever you're slinging out but if you scale this up that same principle has the ability to launch a rocket into orbit that's incredible that idea has been met with skepticism so the spin launch team has much to prove it is one of those ideas that just sounds too crazy I think it's good to look at things from a place of skepticism uh at the outset but then you have to be objective about looking at well what are the underlying physics and what might really be possible the spin launch team is using electricity to generate rotational speed faster than the speed of sound the proposed payload a satellite encased in a bullet-shaped shell must withstand up to 10,000 G's or 10,000 times the force of Earth Earth's gravity until it is released at just the right moment once the aerrow shell gets around 40 Mi up the casing would separate to allow two small rocket engines to propel the payload the rest of the way to low earth orbit the arm itself that's actually spinning around needs to be able to withstand it to a certain degree as well so you have a need to not only make sure that it's structurally sound but there needs to be precision in the timing and the programming of that actual release point I don't have any classical training as an engineer I self-educate I read a lot of books lots of books and then I read them again because I didn't really understand them the first time I became an engineer along the way the team's first goal was to build a proof of concept Mass accelerator at 1/8 scale to validate the key Technologies and use it as a test to spin potential spacebound components at many times the force of Earth's gravity also known as as G force is and uh G represents one unit of Earth gravity when a pilot pulls up on the Yoke of of their Jet and they make a hard turn they'll feel the equivalent of multiple times Earth gravity upwards of H GS for example but spin launch payloads will have to withstand Force orders of magnitude stronger as many as 10,000 G's so the team is working on building and testing components that can survive such extreme acceleration you know in some ways we humans are sort of timid we feel most comfortable with things that look like things we're used to so you can't really tell at the outset whether that thing that you're going that's outlandish is really going to work today the spin launch team is asking a critical question can a payload like a cubat survive 10,000 G's so a cubat is this miniaturization of satellites literally making them into these little Cube components so this 10 cm x 10 cm x 10 cm unit is one piece that can be added on top of each other like Lego blocks so we have some of the most critical subsystems that you would see on any satellite we have a solar cell here it generates a current that charges this battery up and then the battery stores that energy right and distributes it to all of the critical subsystems that require electricity so the OBC or the onboard computer is one of them this is the the brains of the satellite the team is confident the cube sat as a whole Will Survive but so far they've only tested individual components and never the whole system you know it's a very very common strategy in engineering to say we're going to break this problem into small parts we're going to solve each of the original parts and then we're going to put it back together again the team aims to test some of the components that are typically found on cubesats starting with the computer so this is saying effectively its power rails are all working correctly it looks to be talking to the world just fine so far they know that the battery pack is particularly vulnerable a preest of the battery pack system didn't make it out of the accelerator in one piece this gave us a great Benchmark when it hit 7,650 GS and it was pretty darn close and we didn't have to do all that much to make it compatible with our launch environment the batteries aren't designed for 10,000 GS native the spin launch engineering team had to figure out how to make the batteries more resistant to the high G forces so this is the original we saw these batteries laying on top of each other the concern there is that that when you're on the bottom of the stack you're getting three batteries worth of mass squished on to plus your own Mass this orientation of the battery cells didn't work out so well in the spinner the g-forces are going this way and you can even see the bolts are embedded and bent into the base here one of the things that we did was turn it sideways right Let each battery support itself and itself only so we're going to fully populate this satellite with all of the key subsystems that we're testing out here this is the pre-spin test of the solar cell 1.2 volts and then after we're done with the test we will check it out again and make sure that it's still getting a similar uh voltage reading this is going to be the first time that this unit with everything in it the battery pack the computer is spinning up to 10,000 GS reaching the acceleration required for launch is itself a difficult engineering problem here we go at those speeds friction just from the air would be intense so the inside of the accelerator is actually a giant vacuum chamber if you can pull all of the air out of it then there's no more air resistance and consequently heat on the rotational structure there we go now we're going to go let the the vacuum chamber draw down the pressure and then we can spin up accelerating system [Music] 9,000 1.1 956 97 98 10,000 10,000 G's coming down time da [Applause] [Music] go well look at that I don't hear any rattles looks like it's intact the pressure one feels when you're hoping for success is mostly about the incredible personal human investment that's gone in and not wanting to let down all of your colleagues when the moment of truth comes let's crack it open I'm going to test voltage on the solar cell yeah so 0.8 that's in a reasonable range okay so now we will take out the computer looks like it is intact it's still responding when we send it messages so it looks pretty good I would say that that was a successful test pretty cool woo spin launch has done what Engineers do methodically design test evaluate and repeat as they step their way up to a system big enough to send payloads into low earth [Music] orbit we went to the desert of New Mexico to build a flight test system you know at a large scale that would allow us to essentially prove that we had not only the technology validated we could test our own ability to construct and to execute on a system with this magnitude and scale launching at 1/3 scale was a powerful Milestone spinning the payload to more than 1,000 [Music] mph it was an emotional moment from the team you you have to have a little bit of Faith to bring something like this to that level and to that that scale we've conducted 10 successful back-to-back flight tests we haven't had a single failure and I think that's a testament to the practicality of the technology this will be for the first time since we've gone to space as a species that will be doing it differently it's common for engineers to build on an old technology transforming it with new materials to scale their way to Innovation it's with a spinning arm that's throwing satellites into space that's totally new how could that not be exciting when you look at cutting egg technology today you can see that it's just being built upon the things that we've already seen from the past sometimes we boost technology from the more recent past consider something we take for granted in everything from cell phones to cars to video games it's called haptics vibrations and other physical Sensations that enable our technology to talk back to us through our sense of touch at Harvard scientist and engineer shria shason is thinking about those physical feedback loops every time she performs an ancient dance I've been dancing since I was very young the ideas around movement and sensory feedback have been percolating in my brain for a long time when I dance of course I'm intimately aware of my body and its movements what the audience feels however may be limited by their conditioning or what they can perceive visually I am a biomedical engineer by training and at some point I I started to wonder can we use the receptors in our skin to communicate in the complexity of The rhythms that are embedded within the choreography and would that enable the audience to experience then the dance to a higher Dimension shria turned her curiosity into an engineering problem could she share the rhythmic complexity of the choreography as she feels it in her body with the audience to find out she and her dance company co-founder Joshua George are conducting trials at Harvard's motion capture lab so we're going to grab this metat tarso point the motion capture system reads and record records the position of the dots placed on Joshua in order to create a digital version of his movements and understand the biome mechanics of the dance great but more importantly we're interested in capturing what's not readily visible to the eye so muscle activation for example or forces um to the ground now can you flex your biceps audience members can see the movements but they can't feel the force of a step or a jump if you think about how humans interact we like shaking hands we like hugging so being able to tap into that sense of touch or as it sometimes called embodiment is a gateway into allowing you to be and experience something that you're not immediately doing for example it'd be great to feel how a dancer moves so as you Flex the bicep you can see in yellow the activation of that muscle goad we have these reflective markers that we put on someone we have them do a certain Movement we take that information and kind of convert that into body movement um quantitative data what we think of as haptics embedded in technology has roots in aviation as planes Advanced Pilots no longer felt mechanical vibrations in the controls when the plane was about to stall so haptics were used to replace these vibrations artificially preserving the warning haptics is super critical very Innovative in the design process because it has the ability to really blend the physical world with the digital world in our analog world haptics were everywhere things felt you pushed a button on your radio and the button went to clink and you could feel it my brain is evolved to sense whether that action that I've taken with my finger has resulted in in a um an actual an effect shri's team is applying this concept to dance take a feel and see what you think and the team is using modern technology to develop it at the moment we're using two different types of haptics on the phone so we can set them at different intensities different sharpness we can also vary how long they are we're able to then assign a haptic pattern or a vibration pattern to that move and have it happen at that time during the song or during the performance they're under pressure to work out the Kinks they're giving a performance the next day and they hope to work with the audience to test the system he yeah I think we're set for Friday besides enhanced dance performances Sha's lab is also using haptics to do research to help medical patients with muscle spasticity move more more smoothly they're asking if vibration feedback can reduce the symptoms of spasticity a condition that causes muscles to stiffen making them difficult to move often as a result of spinal cord injury or traumatic brain injury ALS multiple sclerosis or cerebral Psy Patrick paraso a PhD candidate is one of Sha's students with spasticity it feels like someone is holding your limb in place anytime you want to move you have to struggle against yourself in the motion capture lab shria is working on a potential solution the nervous system is kind of like an orchestra and conducting it is the brain sending signals but also receiving feedback about which parts are playing what and having them work together is the key to executing movement and moving seamlessly in the world in typical arm motion the bicep contracts to bend the arm at the elbow while the tricep relaxes and the tricep contracts to straighten the arm while the bicep relaxes the device that they're building is designed to pick up activation of one muscle and then mechanically tell the opposite muscle to relax in a patient with spasticity for example there's co-contraction so as your bicep contracts your tricep is also Contracting and that causes that movement to be rigid so we're targeting the biceps and triceps let me know if it's two biomedical engineering requires a foundamental understanding not only of the basic engineering principles like mechanics electronics and uh computer science but also of the foundamental properties of the biology of the human body step one put the Prototype system on student volunteer Annie and use it to collect data with a simple reflex test we've attached EMG sensors so EMG is electromyography we're going to record the activation of her muscles and then display it on this laptop yeah I think it would that was oh yeah that was a stronger step two measure the amount of muscle activation when the device vibrates to see if the activation goes down so now we're going to turn on the vibration here what we're looking at is is can we apply vibratory stimuli at just the right time at the at the right amount and the right parameters to relax the relevant muscles to allow for more free movement y all right so now it should be stimulating on the bicep Can you feel it on your bicep yes yep right there all right great The Next Step preliminary analysis of the Motions the hope is that vibration reduces unwanted muscle Activation so they can use vibrations in their device to relax the targeted muscles if they can demonstrate that then eventually they plan to build a device that will detect activation in one muscle and determine which other muscle to deactivate begin boosting flexibility two and restoring Motion in today's test relx the device is giving them encouraging data confirming vibration as an effective strategy for relaxing specific muscles brings them one step closer to developing a therapeutic device for spasticity the feeling that we were able to what appears to be successfully relax those muscles with vibration was a very good feeling because it means that we're one step closer to help people with spasticity move more easily from one test to another good evening everybody Welcome to decoded rhythms the human nervous system pres the first opportunity for Tria and her dance company to add a layer to the performance through haptic feedback sensation is the gateway to The Human Experience audience members download an app and as they watch and listen they'll feel synchronized [Music] vibrations we're hoping that the audience can be more in tune with the performance by giving them the sort of understanding haptically what the dancers are [Music] doing I thought it was a good work in progress demo most of the technology aspects worked well everything Syed and it was exciting to just see inti people's initial reactions to it I love this um I'm an exb answer there's something about having this motion and movement in my hand but I felt I was moving along with you and that was really cool combining two worlds each adding a bit to the other I would say that the data that we're Gathering From the dance work the biomechanics the ability to classify movements to interpret intent all of those higher level insights uh will guide us in the development of patterns for um patients with spasticity 3 four 5 relax we all have physical limits but tools of all kinds help us go beyond what our bodies can do on their own simple machines like levers and pulleys and screws boost our strength but we also make tools just for [Music] fun every invention starts with an idea we're trying to see how much much play there is for Tahira Reed Smith her idea comes from a childhood passion Double Dutch growing up in Bronx New York in the 1980s Double Dutch was just what you did as a little girl this double rope version of jump rope was brought to New York by Dutch settlers in the 17th century [Music] and more recently it became popular particularly among black girls in cities across the us there are even fiercely competitive National competitions and in some high schools it's recognized as a Varsity Sport to play double dutch requires two people spinning ropes in opposite directions and at least one person to jump to Hera dreamed of a machine that would allow her an only child at the time to play double dutch whenever she wanted in third grade she won a contest for that concept and in the years that followed she never gave up on that dream major passion project talking about an idea that I've had for decades today she's a mechanical engineer and Professor working in human machine systems and she's building to her Ultimate Dream to create an affordable version of her invention that people everywhere could enjoy meanwhile another engineer sky leani is working on her own Double Dutch prototype Sky works at a robotic software company when I was in college I found Dr Reed's Double Dutch machine at a point where I was feeling like I couldn't get where I wanted to go I was just surrounded by a lot of people who didn't look like me I saw she was from the Bronx which is kind of similar to where I'm from and that really inspired me problems that matter that are informed by culture that are informed by background can stimulate the desire to get into engineering the desire to go about this process of creating something that didn't previously exist the problems which we decide are important enough to solve are influenced by someone background in someone's culture Tahira has come to viome robotics in New York City to collaborate with Sky oh my go Bringing along her goddaughter saai part of the latest generation interested in engineering Double Dutch when I first learned about Sky it really touched me deeply because I didn't know that people were watching me from afar when I was looking at your designs I was just like wow really I was just very encouraged by it and I was also impressed by her passion and her excitement sky isn't a mechanical engineer like Tahira is she's iterated on tahira's design adding computer controlled Motors and a software interface to control the two ropes what are the traits of an engineer I think it's hard to generalize I feel like there's there's many different kinds of engineering there's many different kinds of skills required in the different types of engineering she's modernized it writing code to control it there's vision for even an app and doing everything largely through computer software and electronics very little mechanical engineering as Sky describes her approach Tahira sees that sky is running into a familiar problem synchronizing the ropes the ropes need to extend in a high arc turning in opposite directions and staying 180° out of f stay with each other in other words when one rope is on the ground the other should be directly overhead as they rotate they need to maintain a regular rhythm to truly create double dutch it looks easy when a person does it but as Tahira and Sky know firsthand it's anything but simple to engineer that was wrong the motor is always the most challenging aspect and that is how it was with us with double dutch the biomechanics that people use to get it to it looks so seamless but trying to recreate that in a robot yes you realize we have to ask ourselves how does the biology do it with materials and information processing units that no engineer would dream of using how is it that we can move both ropes so well at the same time but a robot can't so then the question is what do we need to do to replicate that let sky has chosen Motors that are powerful enough to swing the ropes with an added feature the motor for the double dutch machine is from a hoverboard they're DC motors with encoders in them so they can track the position the encoder setup uses magnetic poles mounted on the motor's sh a nearby sensor detects the changes in magnetic field as the motor spins tracking the motor's rotational position and speed with Precision that information can then be sent to a computer to adjust the spin in real time at least in theory A B A and C running right now not B he isn't running see for now only three of Sky's four Motors are spinning if these are two people's arms it's just that it's like you step to the right okay they decide to align two working Motors so they can work with one spinning rope for now let's just turn it around let's just [Music] see yeah this is slow enough where I could actually just walk into [Music] it it's an impressive Milestone the two arms turning the Rope are perfectly in sync stop it okay oh my gosh so good I haven't seen anybody use it or anything this let's see it's really important especially in sort of engineering projects where there's a consumer to sort of take prototypes and actually test them with your end users to see what their feedback is that's what I love so much about this project is Double Dutch is collaborative and then robotics as an entire field it combines three types of engineering mechanical electrical and software engineering after making some tweaks to the code they decide to try a true Double Dutch jump you want to hear a Pat Pat Pat Pat Pat Pat okay can you take it over for me with two of the working Motors to hear a guide Sky to be a stand in turn just snatch it from me right all right there you go try with the little bit of hand with Sky assistance the motors are leading the way and they're working like a charm oh that's so satisfying oh my gosh thank you so much Dr re this is so welcome amazing this is fun working with Dr re today was incredible it was actually a dream for me I felt like if I continue with this project I'm going to get there and then I'm going to see myself as a different person who's capable of more than I used to think I was meanwhile after decades Tahira is finally taking her own Double Dutch design to the next level and when we've done small tests she's partnering with a product design company to turn her prototype into an affordable consumer ready version historically what has been difficult has been how to design this system in such a way that it's fully functional and also coste effective which is why she still thinks that the most practical approach is to use only mechanical means to synchronize the motors Tahira and director of industrial design Steve Escobar are deep in the proof of concept stage for now they're working with a rudimentary plywood model to answer a few basic design questions once you have an idea how are you going to actually execute the idea how are you going to design the idea so that people will actually want to use it how are you going to make it accessible um both from a cost perspective but also uh from a a user interface perspective this first iteration of the design uses just one motor on each side plus some good oldfashioned mechanical Hardware like gears rockets and chains already they're facing a few familiar challenges looks like it's in syn actually including getting the ropes in sink it's starting to go out of sink okay with years of Double Dutch experience toira knows exactly what the ropes should sound like we need to be able to hear a consistent pat p Pat Pat but we're hearing it's very rhythmic that's why when stuff's out of beat it's like it's like the whole it's this is just wrong if anything slips it would be a tooth using gears is a common sense way to keep the rotation of the ropes in sync but something is wrong we think the weight of the Rope is throwing this off when it's in motion it's actually creating too much force for these arms let's take some of these off and let's see what happens let's see let me just listen for it so how's it going yes it's coming along Michael spro president of spec design stops in to see how things are progressing where are we at guys how do we as a team they talk about the day's testing and how to improve the design there's a lot to think about with some of the play that's still in the arms your visit with Sky was very inspirational to us and that was switching from a single motor with gears to two Motors at each end when you shared that with us it really kind of turned a light bulb on it's extremely important to have different people who can see things from a different angle uh because each one of us have our own blind spots tahira's initial designs were rooted in her experience with mechanisms but collaborating with sky has expanded the possibilities for realizing the machine the best moments of ideation are in my experience collaborative and they involve ideas bouncing off one another being folded over the negative of that idea being turned in into the positive of this other idea working together across different fields what Engineers call interdisciplinary collaboration can be a powerful multiplier though a lot more troubleshooting remains to he's project is finally coming to life after Decades of work semi surreal exciting it's a lot it's heartwarming it's just glad there's a message behind this product when it gets on the market there's a story to inspire young girls young inventors young minds dreamers to hear a dreamt of a machine that could recreate the Motions of another person's arms but what happens when Engineers take aim at a biological system that is far more complex like Vision restoring the ability to see with an idea that once seemed like science fiction separ the $6 million man I have to say if there was any inspiration that that show was can't hold it she's breaking up she's break we can rebuild him we have the technology When I Was An undergraduate I became interested in how Electronics could be mated with the human body for more than 20 years Phil tro and his interdisciplinary research group have been pioneering a technology designed to restore some Vision to those who have lost the ability to see we've been using Prosthetics to restore our body's abilities for thousands of years one of the most useful Prosthetics has been the very humble glasses right so you have a sense you have a sense of sight but then there's a distortion in the curvature of your eye so then you use a lens to compensate for that but this new device takes visual Prosthetics to the next level the idea is to take the information you capture from a camera and bypass the eyes and optic nerve and go directly to the brain the state of neuroengineering is at its infancy with very very promising avenues for growth one that has been for a very long time a dream of Engineers is to be able to interface with the nervous system Phil's group is the first to receive FDA permission to implant into the brain of a blind person a network of Wireless stimulators each just five millim across you see the electrodes sticking out there even if they meet the criteria the visual the medical criteria they have to be willing to embark on brain surgery it's hard to find someone that fits into all of that criteria the team has qualified their first participant Brian busard who lost his vision completely several years years ago does the headband match my shoes it does actually was perfect I was kidding Brian agreed to have a group of these stimulators surgically implanted in his visual cortex when you're considering designing something that will be implanted in a person one of the safety checks is making sure that whatever that thing is it doesn't actually harm a per and how did you sleep last night on a scale of 1 to 10 for the trial he is referred to as the participant not the patient as his collaboration with the entire team is essential I was going to be the first one in my lifetime I get to be the first of something that could change people's lives later on you know like who was the first person to walk on the moon that's one small step for man one Le for man artificial Vision has really been enabled by advances in imaging technology the the development of incredibly tiny detectors and Incredibly tiny communication signaling transmitters have enabled these implantable devices the implants in Brian's brain are receivers for signals that in turn stimulate the brain the coil transmits signals that they hope the brain will interpret as visual information each of those 25 arrays has has 16 electrodes that we can stimulate on command and the goal is to use those electrodes to activate the healthy neurons that are still there and just haven't been receiving normal visual input for a while what do I see probably the closest thing I would say is if you had blips on a radar screen the process requires creating a new kind of visual language imagine getting these funny flashing lights from either a retinal or a cortical prosthesis that don't look anything like what Vision used to be and then your brain is beginning to discover there's a message to the madness there is some pattern in here and if I can try to find out how things hang together then then I can learn to understand what's around me people used to think well we need to recreate the signals from the eyes into that same neural code but we've seen examples where if you establish a an interface with those are and you give them a consistent input the brain will adapt and interpret those as best as it can as Brian continues to adapt the work has progressed from the chair to a smaller carts sized version of the system connected by aord with researcher Michael Barry pushing the cart and following behind so we're putting on the visible light glass yeah the basic idea is to capture images with a camera technologically somehow convert those images to the commands that go to each of these little modules stand up slowly but to your left the first real exciting thing for me was when we added a camera to it and it went like this with my hand and then I went like oh there's my thumb so that was the first time in probably 6 years that I had a sensation a vision that was exciting it gave me a system so what we're going to work on today is a task of finding an open chair can you identify which chair is open right there great job yeah good job what we're providing is really a targeting system it says for whatever the camera is detecting is something there it says where something is but you don't know what it is let me find the cart that way we don't pull the cords hey so do you want to try something infrared the team decides to expand the testing to include a camera that can see wavelengths of light beyond what humans can see y so now we have the thermal sent answer why should you limit your wavelength to the visible range why not allow someone to see in the thermal range with his limited vision infrared allows Brian to distinguish people and animals by their body heat for this task you will find there's one occupied chair oh there's Grace right there hi Grace nice to meet you but you still have the big donut on the back of your head you still have wires for the camera if you walk too fast well we can pull the coil you lose signal and you got to stop and reset there are a lot of technologies that work beautifully in the lab right where you have a lot of space it's dedicated and everything works well um but the reality is people move they have their lives they want to live the way they want to live and be mobile nice to meet you with the basic technology working the team has been building a system that condenses an entire cart of equipment into a wearable device so Brian can go mobile the camera records images that are translated by a mini computer into signals his brain can understand these are then sent through a transmitter and beamed into Brian's implants reaching his visual cortex okay so I'm going to H this on your belt okay you should be good to go we're good to you're freed up Trish was right there she she moved now she's right there I was just going to tell you you can walk to me I was going to say she's right there yeah I'm right here okay so I'm guessing this is tables over here or somebody or something as soon as he didn't have that starting and stopping of trying to keep the cart right behind him yeah he just decided to just walk around the room and see what all was here becoming untethered was a big step it gave me the flexibility to move and and and try and figure it out quicker or on my own okay there's something here this another table yep so now we have the thermal sensor there's somebody right there you found me hey watching Brian see his wife without his eyes is a powerful validation of all their hard work the moment today when he had on the mobile unit and he walked to his wife and saw her I just thought that was really a special moment she didn't make a sound but you went to her you found her in the room do you think oh my gosh this man has lost his vision and now he can see something with the help of this engineering system strapped to him all of these things have come together all that iteration and testing in protocols the door it's pretty amazing this person is volunteering themselves putting putting themselves at risk they're doing so not because they expect to get Vision back it's for advancement of knowledge it's for what we learn now we make possible what will become a standard of care 100 years from now somebody right there just from a human standpoint I think we should be wired that uh we want to leave the world a better place than it was when we got here the following day the team gathers to review their progress with the mobile system did it accomplish the goal of making you feel more autonomous and liberated well full disclosure if it would have been nice out yesterday it would have been oops I made a leftand turn and go out the door now it's okay well what do we prioritize next probably the next step would be as if we can combine either the two cameras into one or even adding the the second visual camera so we can get depth into it from an engineering perspective engineering is not not just a technology stemming from math and science and the question we're asking is how can an artificial interface like this be used to provide useful sensory information for someone who has blindness we do have now the interface albeit in somewhat simpler form than some would like but we do have the interface and we are now answering the questions is it such a a high-risk High payoff engineering challenge giving Vision to someone who's vision impaired is just such a Holy Grail um engineering strategy and they've done it our aspirations are high and we only get there by making stepbystep incremental progress hi there he is hey buddy I think we're proud of the fact that maybe we got there first good boy I think we're done we're here today with the world around us as it is because we are hardwired to invent design and build tools as we continue to boost our abilities with technology it's anyone's guess what we'll create in the future when we go to create something new we're stepping into to the unknown with creativity and collaboration we can solve even the most difficult problems science fiction has always inspired the world and it is the job of Engineers to convert that inspiration into Innovation and invent the solutions building stuff to benefit [Music] all h [Music]