Hyunhyub Ko and colleagues explain
that electronic skins are flexible, film-like devices designed to detect
pressure, read brain activity, monitor heart rate or perform other functions.
To boost sensitivity to touch, some of them mimic microstructures found in
beetles and dragonflies, for example, but none reported so far can sense the
direction of stress. This is the kind of information that can tell our bodies a
lot about the shape and texture of an object and how to hold it. Ko's team
decided to work on an electronic skin based on the structure of our own so it
could "feel" in three dimensions.
The researchers designed a wearable
artificial skin made out of tiny domes that interlock and deform when poked or
even when air is blown across it. It could sense the location, intensity and
direction of pokes, air flows and vibrations. The scientists conclude that
their advance could potentially be used for prosthetic limbs, robotic skins and
rehabilitation devices.
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