Dubbed E-SOAM (or electronics-integrated soft octopus arm), the new invention is described by its creators as using a "bending-elongation propagation model to move, reach and grasp in a simple but efficient way." While that may sound unwieldy, humans can actually operate it with just a single finger glove to control how the arm reaches and grasps both within its own plane and outside of it.
“We decided to do this project because we saw how octopus capture prey in a very elegant way,” Li Wen, a robotics researcher at Beihang University in Beijing who led the research, told Nature. This is not the first recent invention based off of octopus anatomy. Last year mechanical engineering professor Michael D. Bartlett and researchers from Virginia Tech invented a so-called "Octa-glove" which allows people to securely grip objects under water with the same control as an octopus. As Bartlett explained to Salon, most man-made adhesives do not work underwater, but "the octopus displays this ability with their suckers."