Patients with untreatable conditions such as sight loss or loss of motor-function could be closer to a viable technology for restoring their lost sense, within a faster time frame.
A new approach for identifying signs of hidden awareness in people who cannot speak or move after severe brain injury has ...
Brain-computer interface (BCI) technologies developed independently for 50 years to restore sight and touch are functionally identical, establishing a unified framework that accelerates ...
Summary: Patients surviving severe traumatic brain injuries often enter states designated as Prolonged Disorders of ...
Meta just released the second version of its Brain2Qwerty non-invasive BCI, showing promising improvements that could lead to ...
Add Decrypt as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Meta introduced Brain2Qwerty v2, a non-invasive AI system that decodes brain activity into text. The model achieved 61% ...
Novel AI and brain-computer interface (BCI) systems are no longer confined to the realm of science fiction. As an increasingly intertwined human-machine model moves closer to adoption in real-world ...
A 36-year-old woman in China who developed left-side flaccid paralysis after meningioma surgery has regained the ability to ...
The number of people with electrodes in their brains is believed to have more than doubled in the last couple of years.
Scientists at CU Boulder have discovered something that experienced ballroom dancers have long known: When dancers are in tune with each other, their brains may sync up, helping them move as one.
BCI (brain-computer interface) technology — in which neural signals are routed from a person’s head to a computer — was once the stuff of science fiction, but these days the technology represents a ...