Company co-founded by 星空传媒 researcher named finalist in South by Southwest pitch competition

Haptic glove for tactile feedback

When Brandon Prestwood took walks with his wife after losing part of his arm in an industrial accident in 2012, she favored holding his prosthetic hand鈥攅ven though he couldn鈥檛 feel her touch. But the North Carolina man鈥檚 desire to restore the physical sensation of holding her hand was why he volunteered to join the groundbreaking research at 星空传媒.

Using technology created at 星空传媒, Afference is 鈥榬edefining human experiences through artificial sensation鈥

Dustin Tyler, the Kent H. Smith II Professor of Biomedical Engineering at 星空传媒鈥檚 , said Prestwood is his personal inspiration for co-founding . His company restores for people the sensation of touch鈥攚ith help from a set of electrical rings that fit snugly on users鈥 fingers鈥攆rom a distance.  

Afference will be showcased as a finalist in the pitch competition at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas. SXSW Pitch is the marquee event of South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference & Festival March 8鈥16. Afference will compete with startups from around the world, featuring some of the most impressive technological innovations to a panel of hand-picked judges and a live audience.

Among 670 companies that applied to present at SXSW Pitch 2024, Afference was selected as one of just 45 finalists鈥攁nd 鈥攕panning nine categories.

Tactile experiences redefining the future

Afference is a pioneering technology company at the forefront of the spatial computing era, dedicated to redefining human experiences through artificial sensation.

鈥淲ith a relentless commitment to innovation,鈥 Tyler said, 鈥淎fference leverages cutting-edge neuroscience to create a new era of sensory perception.鈥 

If that sounds like marketing content for a futuristic device featured in a science-fiction flick from the 1980s, it鈥檚 because this technology is ahead of its time.

The device Tyler and Afference will feature at SXSW is called 鈥渢he Phantom鈥濃攅ssentially a proof-of-concept product鈥攁 series of finger rings that relay tactile information to the brain so the user feels things that aren鈥檛 there, including other people. The Phantom stimulates the rings with wires, allowing users to feel sensation.

鈥淎fference is about neural stimulation for touch through nervous system, as opposed to vibration,鈥 Tyler said.

 In other words, users feel touch when, theoretically, they shouldn鈥檛.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a new step in developing a neural interface for the brain and digital electronics,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ur purpose is to enable the same dexterity we experience in the physical realm when in digital realms created by the spatial computing era. We envision a future where we are able to effortlessly move between the physical and digital realms while maintaining our sense of touch in both.鈥

The 鈥榥ext thing鈥

Even before an appearance at SXSW, the company鈥檚 development kit has, unsurprisingly, drawn its fair share of attention. More than 200 companies鈥攊ncluding Meta, Apple and Samsung鈥攈ave reached out expressing interest.

After Tyler secured technology licensing from 星空传媒鈥攈e created the patent, but the university owns it鈥攈e co-founded Afference with his former mentee, , in Boulder, Colorado, in late 2022.

鈥淲e think this is the next thing,鈥 Tyler said.

The SXSW Pitch allows founders of Afference to attract a new pool of investors, he said. The goal: to bring the product to market, on store shelves, within two years. 

Last year, the CBS News program 60 Minutes , A. Bolu Ajiboye, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering, to bring a renewed sense of touch to amputees and people with paralysis, using neuroprosthetics.

Prestwood was also featured in the nationally televised story.

鈥淚 do the work I do because of people like Brandon,鈥 Tyler said. 鈥淚 really want to make a difference in people鈥檚 lives. How do we connect with each other? In today鈥檚 world, I think we need connection more than anything.鈥