America
Indian-origin teen creates low-cost robotic arm
New York, Aug 4
A 17-year-old Indian-origin
teenager has won accolades for an inexpensive robotic arm he created for
his school science fair project in California state of the US.
Nilay
Mehta was awarded a blue ribbon award -- an accolade that recognises a
student's academic excellence in US schools -- for his project.
His
project qualified for the Orange County Science and Engineering Fair
where he won four first-place awards, Daily Pilot newspaper reported
recently.
Nilay, a student of Irvine Public School in California,
spent over four months building and programming the robotic arm to
replicate the movements of a human hand.
"First I was confused
about what direction I would go to, but I knew I wanted to do something
in prosthetics. One issue I saw is that there were no lower-cost
options," Nilay was quoted as saying.
Contrary to the high-end prosthetic arms that cost about $35,000, Nilay's arm can be purchased for $260.
The
robotic arm operates by voice command. By speaking into a small
microphone attached to the arm, the user can make the hand perform
specific movements such as "pinch" and "grab".
Nilay won third
place in the biomedical and health sciences category at the Intel fair,
held in Pittsburgh this year, where nearly 1,800 students from 78
countries showcased their projects.
He said he plans to develop the arm further and enter more science fairs.