China has approved NEO, the world's first commercially cleared invasive brain implant. Designed for certain patients with ...
Australian researchers have trained lab-grown brain cells on a silicon computer chip to play the nineties shooter game "Doom" and say they are just scratching the surface of what the neurons could be ...
Brain-computer interfaces (BCI) sound like science fiction to most people. But this technology is getting real, quickly.
As prominent artificial intelligence (AI) researchers eye limits to the current phase of the technology, a different approach is gaining attention: using living human brain cells as computational ...
The human brain is remarkably complex, with trillions of connections that control how you move, think and feel. Yet it’s still vulnerable to debilitating conditions such as paralysis, stroke, epilepsy ...
The human brain contains roughly 86 billion neurons, and for decades scientists have assumed that these cells are the primary ...
Researchers have been working for decades on so-called brain-computer interfaces to help people who suffer from paralysis, blindness, hearing loss, and more, regain function.
A research team from the School of Engineering at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) has achieved a breakthrough in brain imaging by developing the world's first technology to ...
B rain implants can provide important insights into the nervous system and even relieve the symptoms of brain diseases. But getting implants into a patient’s head is an operation fraught with risks of ...
Australian researchers have trained lab-grown brain cells on a silicon computer chip to play the 1990s shooter game Doom and ...
Each so-called 'biological computer' contains around 200,000 living human brain cells, grown from stem cells that were ...