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Technische Universität München

Stiftung Pfennigparade and TUM: Supporting disabled persons with robotics and AI

TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF MUNICH

NEWS RELEASE

Technical University of Munich enters cooperation with the Pfennigparade Foundation

Supporting disabled persons with robotics and AI

- The TUM and the Pfennigparade Foundation have started a three-year research collaboration.

- The research will focus on the potential of robotics and AI-based technologies to help people with motor disabilities in their daily lives.

- The research collaboration has received approval from the TUM Ethics Committee.

Robotics and AI researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) will work with physically impaired and disabled people from the Pfennigparade Foundation in the future. Over the next three years, the aim is to develop technologies to make their everyday life easier. The Pfennigparade Foundation, which is dedicated to improving the lives of people with disabilities, has made working space available for the research.

“I hope that one day I'll be able to control parts of my body again that I can now move only with great difficulty or not at all,” says Dennis Bruder from the Pfennigparade. The 38-year-old is responsible for the foundation’s digital marketing and social media. As a paraplegic with paralyzed arms and legs, he also receives support and care from Pfennigparade. In summer, the TUM Ethics Committee gave the go-ahead to the research project. “Working with physically impaired and disabled people is a great challenge and responsibility for us,” says project leader Dr. Melissa Zavaglia, a researcher at the Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI) at TUM. “We look forward to working with Stiftung Pfennigparade towards solutions that help people,” said the executive director of MIRMI, Prof. Sami Haddadin.

Robert Hofer, Pfennigparade: “There is a great willingness to get involved.”

For over 70 years, the Pfennigparade Foundation has been striving to build a society where people with and without disabilities can live together easily in all areas of life. Pfennigparade seeks to support people impaired by illness, accidents and congenital disabilities. The mission: “Promoting self-determination, opening up perspectives and shaping opportunities for a self-determined future for people with disabilities.” Technical solutions can help to give people back the skills they have lost and thus enable them to lead a more independent life. “Many people in our care are very willing to participate in the research,” says Robert Hofer, the Managing Director of Outpatient Services at the Pfennigparade Foundation. “People with physical limitations are happy about every step forward that technology can offer them. Playing a role in ensuring that other people can also benefit from new robotic solutions in the future is a great motivation.”

First tests: identifying and decoding movement-related signals from muscles in spinal cord injury volunteers

In the coming weeks, the first study will focus on measuring muscle activity in two people with spinal cord injuries using special electromyography, a form of “high-density EMG”. “We will try to identify movement-related signals from the paralyzed muscles,” explains MIRMI researcher Ioannis Xygonakis. “And we want to investigate whether these signals could be used to control an assistive system or a wheelchair.” The researchers have developed a set of questions to assess how well people can perform typical everyday tasks.

Further information:

Subject matter expert:

Dr. Melissa Zavaglia

Technical University of Munich

Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence (MIRMI)

melissa.zavaglia@tum.de

TUM Corporate Communications Center contact:

Andreas Schmitz

0162 27 46 193

presse@tum.de

www.tum.de

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) is one of the world’s leading universities in terms of research, teaching and innovation, with around 650 professorships, 52,000 students and 12,000 staff. TUM’s range of subjects includes engineering, natural and life sciences, medicine, computer sciences, mathematics, economics and social sciences. As an entrepreneurial university, TUM envisages itself as a global hub of knowledge exchange, open to society. Every year, more than 70 start-ups are founded at TUM, which acts as a key player in Munich’s high-tech ecosystem. The university is represented around the world by its TUM Asia campus in Singapore along with offices in Beijing, Brussels, Mumbai, San Francisco and São Paulo. Nobel Prize laureates and inventors such as Rudolf Diesel, Carl von Linde and Rudolf Mößbauer have conducted research at TUM, which was awarded the title of University of Excellence in 2006, 2012 and 2019. International rankings regularly cite TUM as the best university in the European Union.

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