A robotic hand helps piano players’ fingers move faster
You’re practicing a new song on piano. One part keeps tripping you up. No matter how many times you try it, your fingers just won’t move fast enough. Then you put on a special device that looks like a robotic hand. Its motor wiggles your fingers faster than you could move them on your own. When you sit at the piano again without the robo-hand, your fingers can now hop into high gear. You’re playing the fast part that seemed impossible before. In a recent series of experiments, dozens of professional piano players had this exact experience. They improved their piano skills using a wearable robotic hand, also called an exoskeleton. Shinichi Furuya and his team shared the results January 15 in Science Robotics. “Many people are using this kind of robot for rehabilitation or virtual reality gaming,” says Furuya. “I thought maybe this is also good for music education.” Furuya is a researcher at the NeuroPiano Institute at Sony Computer Science Laboratories, Inc. in Tokyo, Japan. Nicholas Hatsopoulos studies sensory motor control at the …