Prepping for Our Exoskeleton Tryout

Finally, we have lined up the ideal exoskeleton experience to try out and get on video. The researchers at the University of Houston, led by Jose Contreras-Vidal, have one-upped the traditional exoskeleton that assists with aging limbs and joints and created an exo that you control with your brain.

From a business standpoint, exoskeletons are huge for the future of industry, as the workforce ages and more people want to work for longer without pain. From a medical and science standpoint, exoskeletons are helping those born with genetic disorders or who have lost limbs.

Contreras-Vidal has an exoskeleton that’s designed for children… and candidates to be fitted for it are available for us to see them move through the entire process. From Smithsonian Mag:

“A number of researchers over the years have helped paralyzed people move using electrodes implanted in their brains. Contreras-Vidal’s patent-pending system is different because it is noninvasive—users take the electrode cap on and off at will. This is particularly useful in the case of patients who will only need the exoskeleton temporarily, such as stroke victims who might use the exoskeleton to regain walking ability, then learn to walk unaided.”

NOTES from brainstorm call w/Team Video (Mito, Nick) plus editor Uri:

Questions: If our bodies fail and our brains are still working, do we still exist? At what point are we brains in a jar?

Is this a question we could address in 30 years?

What is the far end of this, implication wise?

What are the future iterations of exoskeletons?

What are the implications of BMI’s, generally?

At what point does a “human” end and “machine” begin, i.e. cyborgs?

Exoskeletons protect your body, older people or joints — then build on that from there. Tell it in steps. So people can imagine how this evolves.

1) this is a thing and protect a worker or a 90 year old person. but this is just the beginning.

2) what is possible? the brain will break down, too. maintain mobility while body is deteriorating.

3) Is there a suit or other materials to help. How does the design evolve into something more efficient?

There’s exoskeletons. Then there’s BMI. Which could have many applications for the body. Then there’s the future of the human body, which involves gene therapy, etc. What are other applications of BMI that can cover the field?

The cyborg question: Ground level. An exoskelton supplements movement. Needles in the brain. How many different replacement categories can we think of? Movement, speech, cognition. Rachet it up and somewhere is a line people are uncomfortable crossing.

Where do you see the technology being developed now? Is there more lifelike or muscle type exo work being done?

There’s three tiers: Exoskeletons, BMI, Human Body

Addressing the so what? question, i.e. These are some applications and developments so you can see how this ties together. We are doing a baby step to introduce BMI in the exoskeleton feature, since it is the most obvious place to see signals are getting sent and programed by scientists into artificial limbs. It introduces how this level of exoskeletons really work. Maybe we can touch on Lowe’s exos work…

But then we escalate into far more ethical/philosophical questions by introducing different BMIs over time.

Project Update: We’ve Arrived at a Framework!

My editor, Uri, is back from his time away from the desk and we had a great call in which I updated him on my discoveries and conversations over the past two weeks.

I’ve landed on a framework not by industry (because those industries might not exist in 2050), and not by ideology (because that’s probably too abstract) and not tools (AI, for instance, will be a layer that affects many ways of life and governance, etc). So what breaks us out of traditional reporting constraints but isn’t too constraining is to organize by HUMAN NEED: to live, to love, to find community, etc.

This allows me to start with an exploration of the future human itself, physiologically, the human body and its need for water/food etc and then work outward to love and connection (dating, reproduction, sex and gender, etc) and then further outward to community and housing, and further outward to humans going from place-to-place and getting goods and services (transportation).

It also globalizes the work, it isn’t America centric. All humans share the same basic needs. This gives us a much wider audience possibility for video on streaming services or on YouTube and the like. Very exciting on that front.

We’re going to get going with ideas about how humans will actually function and be made in 2050 — likely with expanded physical and mental capacity as well as lifespan. Very exciting!

The premise is the oft-cited William Gibson quote: The future is already here, it’s just not evenly distributed. There are places where the future human is already evident or being experimented. That’s what we will begin our exploration doing/seeing. But we’ll also LOOK BACK to how predictions of thirty years ago about 2020 looked, and how they might have gotten things wrong and if so, why. It’s a nod to how even though we’re getting insight and helping people think about 2050, we also know we’ll be off the mark for reasons we aren’t anticipating.