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Funded Projects › HORIZON

VIBRA-Kids · VIBRA-Kids: Wearable VIBRation and Audio interface to boost motor and cognitive impairment in children with cerebral palsy

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 July 202631 December 2027EU funding €150,000Call ERC-2025-POC

Movements are essential for early development, allowing infants to link proprioceptive feedback with tactile, auditory, and visual inputs. This early multisensory association builds body awareness, spatial cognition, and social interaction. In cerebral palsy (CP), the most common congenital motor disability, affecting 2 to 3 children per 1,000 live births worldwide, this process is disrupted from birth. Without sufficient motor experience, children with CP lack the foundations for multisensory body maps, leading to cascading deficits in cognition, autonomy, and participation. Current rehabilitation strategies target motor or cognitive functions separately and are poorly suited to infants, leaving a critical gap during the period of maximal brain plasticity. VIBRA-Kids addresses this gap as the first science-based wearable device designed to restore the sensory-motor-body link in early life. It combines two non-invasive stimulations: focal muscle vibration, activating proprioception and inducing illusory movements, and sonification, converting motion parameters into sounds. Their integration uniquely engages multisensory networks, supporting motor and cognitive development. The system consists of a wristband delivering vibration to the weaker limb, paired with infant-safe headphones for sonification. Its ecological design enables home and daily use, and it can complement existing therapies. The project capitalizes on the ERC StG MyFirstBody, which has already demonstrated that congenital motor deprivation impairs the development of body and space representations, highlighting the urgent need for targeted interventions. VIBRA-Kids will be developed and validated stepwise, from healthy adults to children with CP, with behavioural, clinical, and neural outcomes. If successful, it will deliver a child-friendly, ecological, and scalable technology to rebuild the foundational sensory-motor-body link, improving lifelong outcomes and paving the way for commercialization.

Consortium · 1 organisation

coordinator

UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI TORINO

IT · €150,000

Research fields

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