These prosthetic limbs can be controlled with your mind

Just in time for Terminator: Genesys, real cyborgs walk among us

Losing a limb is generally considered a bad thing, but scientists appear to be getting closer to making it more manageable, by perfecting prosthetic replacements that respond to the user's thoughts.

According to reports by the New York Times, engineers at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab are developing a robot arm that has 26 joints and can curl up to 18kg in weight. More importantly, it is controlled by the user's mind.

Another research project concentrates on the foot. Prosthetics maker Ossur has developed an implantable sensor that can enable users to mentally control false ones.

For people with mechanical legs, there is a delay between wanting to move a foot and it actually moving. This new sensor picks up the wearer's intention from the remaining muscles and moves the mechanics in the prosthetic leg to flex and extend the leg, much more like an organic limb. Surgery to implant the sensor only takes around 15 minutes.

Sources: New York Times, Ossur