佚名
英国研究人员就机械手指如何影响钢琴演奏者的钢琴弹奏能力进行了探索。
British researchers have explored how a robotic finger can affect a persons ability to play the piano.
The experiment involved attaching a robotic finger to the right hand of 12 test subjects. Six of the individuals were piano players. Six were not.
The leader of the project was Professor Aldo Faisal, a neuroscientist at Britains Impe?rial College of London. Being a piano player himself, he said he wondered how his playing ability would be affected if he had an extra finger.
“So I really started with a robotics cha?llenge,” Faisal told Reuters news agency. “Can we build a robotic finger that can sit on the opposite side of the right hand and play music with it?”
The robotic finger was controlled by elec?trical signals produced by the foot movements of the piano players.
Faisal said the robotic finger felt very unnatural and was difficult for players to get used to at first. But after a few hours using the device, he said it almost felt like “an extension of you”.
Faisal noted that within an hour of being fitted with the robotic finger, six players had learned to use it effectively with the piano keys.
“Theres a dedicated area of your brain res?ponsible for every single finger,” Faisal said. “If I give you an eleventh finger... are you processing it the same way as youre processing a regular limb?”
Researchers involved in the experiment re?ported that the six pianists and six non?playing volunteers all quickly adapted to using the extra finger. They said this result suggests people are not limited to using an extra finger only for things they already know how to do.
“The fact that you can actually play with eleven fingers... has to do with how your brain is actually wired up,” Faisal said. “So what we can say is its a proof of existence. We can do it. So the next challenge would be—can we do two robotic fingers, so 12 fingers?”
He added, “Its a very exciting moment in time now to see what we can do.”
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