Patents by Inventor Benjamin Maimon

Benjamin Maimon has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20230145008
    Abstract: A nerve in a mammal is optogenetically transduced, wherein the nerve is susceptible to stimulus by selective application of transdermal light, and a light source is applied to dermis of the mammal at or proximate to the optogenetically transduced nerve, to thereby stimulate the nerve. A wearable device for optogenetic motor control and sensation restoration of a mammal includes a wearable support, a power source at the wearable support, a controller at the wearable support and in electrical communication with a power source, and a transdermal light source coupled to the controller.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 25, 2022
    Publication date: May 11, 2023
    Inventors: Hugh M. Herr, Benjamin Maimon, Anthony Zorzos
  • Patent number: 11504530
    Abstract: A nerve in a mammal is optogenetically transduced, wherein the nerve is susceptible to stimulus by selective application of transdermal light, and a light source is applied to dermis of the mammal at or proximate to the optogenetically transduced nerve, to thereby stimulate the nerve. A wearable device for optogenetic motor control and sensation restoration of a mammal includes a wearable support, a power source at the wearable support, a controller at the wearable support and in electrical communication with a power source, and a transdermal light source coupled to the controller.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 31, 2017
    Date of Patent: November 22, 2022
    Assignee: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Hugh M. Herr, Benjamin Maimon, Anthony Zorzos
  • Publication number: 20220031479
    Abstract: Proprioceptive feedback is provided in a residual limb of a person that includes forming a linkage between a pair of agonist and antagonist muscles, forming a sliding surface over which the agonist and antagonist muscles slide. The sliding surface can include a synovial sleeve, a bridge formed between the distal ends of bones, or a fixture that is osseointegrated into the bone. The invention also includes a system for transdermal electrical communication in a person that includes a percutaneous access device, a sensory device that communicates signals between a muscle and the percutaneous device, and a stimulation device in communication with the percutaneous access device. In another embodiment, a closed-loop functional stimulation system restores lost functionality to a person that suffers from impairment of a neurological control system or at least partial loss of a limb.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 20, 2021
    Publication date: February 3, 2022
    Inventors: Hugh M. Herr, Tyler Clites, Benjamin Maimon, Anthony Zorzos, Matthew J. Carty, Jean-Francois Duval, Shriya Sruthi Srinivasan
  • Patent number: 11179251
    Abstract: Proprioceptive feedback is provided in a residual limb of a person that includes forming a linkage between a pair of agonist and antagonist muscles, forming a sliding surface over which the agonist and antagonist muscles slide. The sliding surface can include a synovial sleeve, a bridge formed between the distal ends of bones, or a fixture that is osseointegrated into the bone. The invention also includes a system for transdermal electrical communication in a person that includes a percutaneous access device, a sensory device that communicates signals between a muscle and the percutaneous device, and a stimulation device in communication with the percutaneous access device. In another embodiment, a closed-loop functional stimulation system restores lost functionality to a person that suffers from impairment of a neurological control system or at least partial loss of a limb.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 6, 2017
    Date of Patent: November 23, 2021
    Assignee: MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Hugh M. Herr, Tyler Clites, Benjamin Maimon, Anthony Zorzos, Matthew J. Carty, Jean-Francois Duval, Shriya Sruthi Srinivasan
  • Publication number: 20200046968
    Abstract: A nerve in a mammal is optogenetically transduced, wherein the nerve is susceptible to stimulus by selective application of transdermal light, and a light source is applied to dermis of the mammal at or proximate to the optogenetically transduced nerve, to thereby stimulate the nerve. A wearable device for optogenetic motor control and sensation restoration of a mammal includes a wearable support, a power source at the wearable support, a controller at the wearable support and in electrical communication with a power source, and a transdermal light source coupled to the controller.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 31, 2017
    Publication date: February 13, 2020
    Inventors: Hugh M. Herr, Benjamin Maimon, Anthony Zorzos
  • Publication number: 20190021883
    Abstract: Proprioceptive feedback is provided in a residual limb of a person that includes forming a linkage between a pair of agonist and antagonist muscles, forming a sliding surface over which the agonist and antagonist muscles slide. The sliding surface can include a synovial sleeve, a bridge formed between the distal ends of bones, or a fixture that is osseointegrated into the bone. The invention also includes a system for transdermal electrical communication in a person that includes a percutaneous access device, a sensory device that communicates signals between a muscle and the percutaneous device, and a stimulation device in communication with the percutaneous access device. In another embodiment, a closed-loop functional stimulation system restores lost functionality to a person that suffers from impairment of a neurological control system or at least partial loss of a limb.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 6, 2017
    Publication date: January 24, 2019
    Inventors: Hugh M. Herr, Tyler Clites, Benjamin Maimon, Anthony Zorzos, Matthew J. Carty, Jean-Francois Duval