eight year old carly frye is now the first child to receive a robotic deep brain stimulation. the procedure implants electrodes into the patient's brain and treats movement disorders like parkinson's disease. robots make the procedure much safer because of the required precision. if you think about it, robots don't have a tremor and you tell the robot exactly what to do, it will do it to the submillimeter. carly was an average little girl, meeting all of her milestones up until age four, and then she got an ear infection that triggered a fever that triggered her disease. she was diagnosed with rapid onset dystonia, initially paralyzed, carly made slow progress on medications, but this surgery was a game changer. using a tablet, carly's family can now tune the electrodes in her brain, helping this little girl regain control over her body. >> we can turn it up, or we can turn it down as needed. if we feel like she's been extra tight, we can adjust it to however we need to move things around. >> carly went from not always being able to sit up or feed herself, to walking out of th