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China’s Brain-Computer Interface bet: Inside BrainCo’s quest to commercialize brain-tech frontier
Elaine Yu sits down with Nyx He, Partner and SVP at BrainCo—one of Hangzhou’s ‘Six Little Dragons,’ a group of the city's ...
Neuralink tested a brain implant approach that threads electrodes through the dura without cutting it open. The company says ...
A new approach for identifying signs of hidden awareness in people who cannot speak or move after severe brain injury has ...
The University of Michigan Health has completed the first in-human surgery using a long-term wireless brain computer ...
A less invasive brain-computer interface is being developed to help people with impaired speech, including ALS, communicate.
Based on a recent medtech analyst report, this slideshow highlights more than nine companies developing brain-computer ...
Chinese startup NeuroXess on Thursday reported two significant clinical-trial milestones: its flexible brain-computer ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Michigan doctors place first-in-human wireless brain implant in woman who struggles to speak
Connexus uses 421 microelectrodes to detect signals from individual neurons.
Guests pose for photos during the plateau brain-computer interface (BCI) clinical application center inauguration ceremony at Lhasa People's Hospital in Lhasa, southwest China's Xizang Autonomous ...
Police sergeant Lee Marten became the first patient to receive Neuralink's BCI using an experimental surgical robot that ...
The number of people with electrodes in their brains is believed to have more than doubled in the last couple of years.
Science fiction has long imagined a world where our brains interact with machines to restore and augment our abilities—think of the neural implants that connected to Geordi La Forge’s visor in Star ...
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