The device, called NEO, records neuronal activity and translates it to movements made a metal glove worn by a patient.
Meta recently open-sourced Brain2Qwerty v2, a noninvasive Brain–Computer Interface (BCI) that can decode sentences from ...
A brain-computer interface helped restore movement and sensation in a 48-year old man with quadriplegia, researchers say.
Shanghai surgeons implanted Neuracle's NEO, the first commercially approved brain-computer interface. It sits on the brain rather than piercing it.
Implantable devices in the brain have been used for about 30 years to assist people with disabilities in completing motor ...
After 15-hours of open-brain surgery, a team of specialists successfully completed the first “double neural bypass” procedure ...
Based on a recent medtech analyst report, this slideshow highlights more than nine companies developing brain-computer ...
What if people who have lost the ability to feel their hands could get that sense back—not through a prosthetic glove, but ...
Interest in brain-computer interfaces is rising as it promises to help people with compromised neural abilities.
Regulatory approval of brain implants in China mean they can now be fixed to the brains of anyone who wants to try them.
The number of people with electrodes in their brains is believed to have more than doubled in the last couple of years. This week, I covered the story of Casey Harrell—a man with ALS who is “the first ...
More and more individuals now have chronically implanted brain-computer interface (BCI) systems in their heads. Devices that can record and stimulate neural signals are increasingly moving from labs ...