In a groundbreaking stride toward enhancing the functionality of prosthetic limbs, researchers at the Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, in partnership with the Cleveland Clinic, have unveiled a novel understanding of how the human brain perceives movement. Published in the prestigious journal Science Advances, their findings illuminate the complexities of sensory integration and offer promising avenues for the development of prosthetics that more naturally replicate the sense of movement—a crucial step for restoring dexterity to those with upper limb amputations.
The crux of their research centers on how kinesthetic feedback—our intrinsic ability to sense muscle movements—is not processed by the brain as discrete signals but rather as integrated patterns of hand movements, or “synergies.” This insight emerged from a unique comparison between two of the world’s only neural-machine interfaces aimed at reinstating kinesthetic sensation in prosthetic users. By merging data from these distinct technologies, the team discerned that the brain interprets vibrations generated to simulate muscle movement as coordinated hand grasps rather than isolated stimuli, reshaping our understanding of sensory processing in motor control.
Kinesthesia itself, the perception of muscle action and position, plays an indispensable role in seamlessly orchestrating voluntary movement. Amputation severs this natural feedback, rendering prosthetic control a less intuitive and more cognitively demanding task. Traditional approaches to prosthetic feedback have involved muscle vibration to simulate movement; however, these methods often inadvertently stimulate skin and muscular receptors simultaneously. Such dual activation may create conflicting inputs, confusing the sensorimotor integration pathways and impairing the user’s control fidelity.
Responding to these challenges, the Sant’Anna research team engineered the myokinetic kinesthetic interface (MKkI), a pioneering bidirectional system that employs minimally invasive implanted magnets within residual forearm muscles. These magnets produce precisely controlled vibrations that exclusively target muscular structures, circumventing the skin’s sensory receptors. When coupled with the robotic Mia Hand, a product of the Sant’Anna spin-off Prensilia, MKkI enables users to receive authentic feedback correlating directly with natural hand movements, promising a leap forward in prosthetic sensation.
Over a rigorous six-week clinical trial, this interface was evaluated with a 34-year-old patient, who reported perceiving hand opening and closing as fluid, coordinated patterns mirroring those experienced prior to amputation. The significance of such perceptual fidelity cannot be overstated; it reflects the potential to bridge the sensory gap that has long hindered prosthetic integration, making mechanical hands feel more like true extensions of the body rather than artificial tools.
The uniqueness of this innovation lies in its approach to stimulation. Unlike existing paradigms that rely on skin interaction to evoke sensations, MKkI’s targeted muscle vibration—facilitated by implantable magnets—offers a purer form of kinesthetic input. As Dr. Federico Masiero, lead author and current researcher at the Munich Institute of Robotics and Machine Intelligence, articulates, this strategy may unlock more nuanced insights into human motor control and pave the way for restoring movement sensations lost through limb loss.
Intriguingly, parallel research at the Cleveland Clinic features an alternative kinesthetic feedback system based on surgical nerve redirection partnered with robotics. Despite fundamental differences in their mechanisms—magnetic muscle vibration in MKkI versus nerve stimulation in the Cleveland model—both systems elicited remarkably similar perceptual outcomes. Users in both studies experienced induced sensations as cohesive finger movements rather than fragmented feedback, highlighting an intrinsic neurological preference for integrated movement patterns.
Moreover, both teams observed instances where sensations generated by these interfaces were detected subconsciously by users, suggesting that some aspects of kinesthetic feedback operate beneath the threshold of conscious awareness. This discovery adds layers of complexity to how sensory information is processed and integrated within the central nervous system and could influence future designs of prosthetic feedback systems that harmonize with natural neural processing.
Taken together, these findings challenge earlier assumptions that movement sensations in prosthetics must be artificial reconstructions of discrete sensor signals. Instead, the brain’s apparent integration of these cues as holistic synergies opens new pathways for developing devices that users control more intuitively and naturally, thereby enhancing their everyday functionality and user experience.
Looking ahead, the research team aims to refine this technology by incorporating prior advancements that enable reading the real-time position of implanted magnets to drive prosthetic movement—while concurrently using superimposed vibrations for sensory feedback. This closed-loop control system, marrying motor output with sensory input, underpins the vision of a fully integrated prosthetic limb that both moves and feels like a natural extension of the user’s body.
The long-term objective extends beyond temporary demonstration implants to the development of durable, permanent implants capable of maintaining function over prolonged periods. According to Professor Christian Cipriani, who spearheaded the MKkI design and study coordination, the initial six-week implant served as a proof-of-concept exhibiting promising efficacy. With plans underway to iterate on implant longevity and safety, future trials hope to enroll larger participant cohorts, bolstering the generalizability and clinical translation of these technologies.
This interdisciplinary project, orchestrated by The BioRobotics Institute of Sant’Anna with vital collaborations including Pisa University Hospital and the Cleveland Clinic, has been fortified through diverse funding pathways—ranging from European Research Council grants to U.S. NIH and DARPA backing. Such support underscores the global and cross-institutional recognition of the project’s transformative potential for healthcare and rehabilitation technologies.
By illuminating the sophisticated ways in which the brain organizes and perceives movement via implanted prostheses, this research lays a robust foundation for the next generation of neuroprosthetics. The combination of naturalistic grasp sensation with intuitive motor control could herald a paradigm shift—enabling amputees to reclaim not only function but also the profound sensory experience of hand use, thereby restoring agency and quality of life.
Subject of Research: Neural-machine interfaces for restoring kinesthetic sensation in upper limb prosthetics
Article Title: Coordinated hand movement sensation revealed through an implanted magnetic prosthetic kinesthetic interface
News Publication Date: 24-Jun-2026
Web References:
- DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adx5046
- Cleveland Clinic kinesthetic feedback system overview: https://newsroom.clevelandclinic.org/2018/03/14/cleveland-clinic-researchers-uncover-new-way-to-restore-movement-sensation-in-patients-with-upper-limb-amputations/
- Stroke rehabilitation related applications: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neurorobotics/articles/10.3389/fnbot.2021.610673/full
- Prior work on position reading of implanted magnets: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adp3260
- Collaborative studies groundwork: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1741-2552/ac6537
Image Credits: Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies
Keywords
Prosthetics, Neural Interfaces, Kinesthetic Sensation, Hand Prosthesis, Myokinetic Interface, Motor Control, Sensory Feedback, Brain-Machine Interface, Rehabilitation Robotics, Amputation, Neuroprosthetics, Implanted Magnets
