The device, called NEO, records neuronal activity and translates it to movements made a metal glove worn by a patient.
China's Neuracle successfully implanted the first commercial brain-computer interface, NEO, enabling a paralyzed patient to control a robotic glove through neural signals.
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 ...
Based on a recent medtech analyst report, this slideshow highlights more than nine companies developing brain-computer ...
Chinese startups such as BrainCo are looking to challenge Neuralink by betting that the future of mass market neural tech ...
A new brain-computer interface (BCI) developed at UC Davis Health translates brain signals into speech with up to 97% accuracy—the most accurate system of its kind. The researchers implanted sensors ...
Shanghai’s Huashan Hospital carried out the world’s first commercial brain-computer interface implant surgery on July 13, ...
University of California, Davis researchers have developed a brain-computer interface (BCI) that enables computer cursor control and clicking, using neural signals from the speech motor cortex. One ...
Meta recently open-sourced Brain2Qwerty v2, a noninvasive Brain–Computer Interface (BCI) that can decode sentences from ...
Implantable devices in the brain have been used for about 30 years to assist people with disabilities in completing motor ...
Coin-sized implant marks a breakthrough in neurotechnology, underscoring China's bid to lead the global race against Elon Musk's Neuralink China has completed the world's first commercial surgery ...
A BCI that works once but becomes harder to tolerate over time is not a mature system; it is an unfinished one.