Robert Wellesley Mann

Robert Wellesley Mann (1924, Brooklyn, New York – 2006) was a pioneer in the field of medical prosthetics.

Mann was a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,[1] where professor of mechanical engineering for almost 40 years and a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences.

[1] Mann graduated from Brooklyn Technical High School before serving in the Pacific theater in the Army during WWII.

In September 1968, a team of physicians and designers, led by Mann, introduced the "Boston Digital Arm", the first prosthetic limb controlled by a brain–computer interface, wherein the wearer could control the movement of the arm by the electric signals sent by the brain to electronic instruments designed to interpret the signals.

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