Article 4ZG7F Professor Hacks His Arm Prosthesis to Plug Into a Synthesizer to Control the Music Using His Thoughts

Professor Hacks His Arm Prosthesis to Plug Into a Synthesizer to Control the Music Using His Thoughts

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#4ZG7F)
Synlimb-Bertold-Meyer.jpg

Bertolt Meyer, a German psychology professor who was born without a left arm, very cleverly created a specialized converter called the "Synlimb", with the help of his husband Daniel Theiler and Koma Elektronik. This brilliant hack channels the electrical current from his own body into a measurable voltage, sends it through to his synthesizer, allowing him to control the emitted sound with the signals from his brain.

The SynLimb converts the electrode signals that my prosthesis picks up from my residual limb into control voltages (CV) for controlling my modular synthesizer. The SynLimb thus allows me to plug my prosthesis directly into my synthesizer so that I can control its parameters with the signals from my body that normally control the hand. For me, this feels like controlling the synth with my thoughts.

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A post shared by Bertolt Meyer (@bertolt01) on Feb 13, 2020 at 8:37am PST

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A post shared by Bertolt Meyer (@bertolt01) on Feb 12, 2020 at 8:58am PST

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The post Professor Hacks His Arm Prosthesis to Plug Into a Synthesizer to Control the Music Using His Thoughts first appeared on Laughing Squid.

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