A groundbreaking brain implant has allowed a paralyzed man to control a virtual drone and fly it through an obstacle course.
The brain–computer interface allowed the participant to control the drone with six times the accuracy of EEG-based systems.
Researchers from the Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden set out to revive these richer sensations in paralyzed patients ... stimulation could allow people with paralysis to perform ...
The study, published in Nature Medicine, was founded on paralyzed individuals' desire to engage in hobbies like sports or gaming, activities that may normally be difficult due to loss of movement in ...
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Darren Edwards knows a lot about hopelessness; one minute, he was rock climbing in North Wales about to finish his route, and ...
A new brain-computer interface has achieved an “unprecedented” level of control for a person who isn’t able to use their limbs, enabling them to fly a quadcopter in a gaming environment. The ...
T5 is part of the BrainGate2 Neural Interface System clinical trial, which launched in 2009 to help paralyzed people control computer cursors, robotic arms, and other devices by decoding electrical ...
Brain-computer interfaces may allow paralyzed people to perform basic actions such as eating and typing, but … well, there's more to life than eating and typing. That's where an unprecedented ...
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