David Sengeh: The sore problem of prosthetic limbs
大卫·森格: 假肢的困境
Even the most advanced prosthetic isn't useful if it's hard to wear. This observation guides TED Fellow David Sengeh's work at the Biomechatronics group in the MIT Media Lab. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
长达 10 年的叛乱战争,
很多村庄遭受到灭顶之灾。
same experiences we had.
战争和残害他人
而感到疼痛。
踝关节假体连接在一起。
三周到数年的时间
舒适的假肢接受腔。
会给病人的残肢带来
how to solve this problem,
如何解决这个问题,
在麻省理工学院的媒体实验室,
所表现的准确形状
过程快速并且价格低廉。
我们研究组所开发的
那些被战争和疾病伤害的人们
sense of human potential.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
David Sengeh - Biomechatronics engineerEven the most advanced prosthetic isn't useful if it's hard to wear. This observation guides TED Fellow David Sengeh's work at the Biomechatronics group in the MIT Media Lab.
Why you should listen
David Sengeh was born and raised in Sierra Leone, where more than 8,000 men, women and children had limbs amputated during a brutal civil war. He noticed that many people there opted not to wear a prosthesis because proper fit is such an issue.
Sengeh has pioneered a new system for creating prosthetic sockets, which fit a prothesis onto a patient's residual limb. Using MRI to map the shape, computer-assisted design to predict internal strains and 3D printing to allow for different materials to be used in different places, Sengeh is creating sockets that are far more comfortable than traditional models. These sockets can be produced cheaply and quickly, making them far more likely to help amputees across the globe.
Sengeh was named one of Forbes' 30 under 30 in Technology in 2014, and in April 2014, Sengeh won the $15,000 "Cure it!" Lemelson-MIT National Collegiate Student Prize.
David Sengeh | Speaker | TED.com