The device, called NEO, records neuronal activity and translates it to movements made a metal glove worn by a patient.
Regulatory approval of brain implants in China mean they can now be fixed to the brains of anyone who wants to try them.
What if people who have lost the ability to feel their hands could get that sense back - not through a prosthetic glove, but through tiny pulses of electricity delivered directly to the brain?
A brain-computer interface helped restore movement and sensation in a 48-year old man with quadriplegia, researchers say.
After 15-hours of open-brain surgery, a team of specialists successfully completed the first “double neural bypass” procedure ...
Ultrathin nanoelectrodes blend into facial skin, capturing brain, eye and muscle signals without the discomfort or stigma of ...
A brain-computer interface paired with electrical stimulation patches helped a paralyzed man regain hand strength, dexterity, ...
OpenAI and Work Louder built a $230 mini keyboard that gives Codex users physical shortcuts, live agent status lights, and a dial for adjusting how hard the AI thinks.