Science and technology | Embodying the future

Why prosthetic limbs need not look like real ones

Designers are experimenting with tentacles, spikes and third thumbs

Kelly Knox, a model, poses with a prosthetic tentacle extending from her left elbow.
Photograph: Suede Baby

In a photoshoot Kelly Knox—a British model and disability-rights advocate—poses with a prosthetic limb unlike any other. Ms Knox was born with her left arm missing from the elbow down. From the point her arm terminates, dozens of vertebrae-like structures extend to form a long, sinuous tentacle.

The limb is certainly striking. It is dextrous, too. Ms Knox can control its movements via pressure sensors in her shoes, which connect to the limb wirelessly. Artificial tendons can tighten or loosen, allowing the tentacle to reach and grasp. The limb—detached from Ms Knox and titled VINE 2.0—is due to go on display at “BODIES…The Exhibition at the Luxor, a hotel and casino in Las Vegas, later this year.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline "Weird and wonderful"

How to end the Middle East’s agony

From the February 3rd 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Science and technology

To stay fit, future Moon-dwellers will need special workouts

Running around the inside of a barrel might help

Wind turbines keep getting bigger

That poses a giant transport problem