Neuroadaptive Training Plans That Speed Up Prosthetic Learning

Learning to use a prosthetic limb isn’t just about moving muscles. It’s about training the brain. Every movement—from picking up a spoon to tying shoelaces—starts with signals in the mind. When someone begins using a bionic hand or arm, those signals need to be retrained. The brain must build new paths. It must learn to […]
How to Structure Rehab Sessions for Adaptive Bionic Users

Fitting a bionic limb is just the beginning. What truly makes a difference in a user’s life is what comes after—the journey of learning, adapting, and regaining control. Rehab sessions are where this transformation happens. They’re not just about teaching movements. They’re about rebuilding confidence, rebuilding routines, and helping someone feel at home in their […]
Why Every Prosthetist Should Care About Closed-Loop Systems

Think about what it means to truly feel. Not just touching something, but really sensing it—knowing if it’s soft, hard, warm, or fragile. For most people, this happens naturally. For someone using a prosthetic hand, it doesn’t. Or at least, it didn’t. Now, imagine giving that feeling back. Imagine your patient not just holding a […]
How Adaptive Feedback Loops Improve Functional Outcomes

When a person uses a bionic hand, they’re not just moving a machine. They’re entering a conversation with it. That conversation is what we call a feedback loop. At its simplest, it means the user sends a signal, the device responds, and the user reacts to that response. But in adaptive systems, this loop goes […]
Myoelectric vs Adaptive Control: Clinician-Friendly Breakdown

If you’re a clinician working with upper-limb amputees, you’ve likely heard the terms myoelectric control and adaptive control. At first glance, they may sound similar. After all, both involve a bionic hand responding to muscle signals. But the way they work—and the way they support the user—are very different. And those differences matter. The choice […]