While the United States and Europe are moving cautiously forward with clinical trials, China is racing toward the ...
Two people with paralysis were able to type strokes on a virtual keyboard using an implant that decodes attempted finger ...
Everyone – ourselves included – is talking about AI these days, for good reason. AI models now draft legal contracts, design chips, code software, edit videos, discover drugs, even run autonomous labs ...
People with paralysis affecting their speech and hands can struggle to communicate, and the loss is often cited as one of the ...
The Implantable Brain Computer Interface technology industry must work alongside policy makers to expeditiously establish a sustainable pathway for coverage and access for the patients who need the ...
Passive Brain-Computer Interfaces (pBCIs) have shown significant advancements in recent years, indicating their readiness for practical, everyday applications beyond research laboratories.
Last summer, a team of researchers reported using a brain-computer interface to detect words people with paralysis imagined saying, even without them physically attempting to speak. They also found ...
When a new technology shows promise, performance-wise and commercially, innovation does not stop. To the contrary, it gathers pace. New medical devices typically emerge from competing groups of ...