That is, unless you’re wearing a special glove that can make you feel something. Created by scientists at Cornell University, this prototype glove acts as a stretchable skin sensor that monitors the movements of the fingers and creates the feeling of touching something.
Each finger is covered with a stretchable lightguide made of a transparent polyurethane core and an LED-linked core full of absorbent dyes. Those dyes light up and register your actions when you move your fingers, which could in turn tell the glove to provide feedback to those areas where your fingers think they’re coming into contact with something.