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Wireless Device Transmits Brain Signals

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Exercise Plays Vital Role Maintaining Brain HealthTechnology that allows paralyzed people to use thought commands to manipulate computers already exists. However, it is not practical for everyday use: the design is complicated and messy, involving many wires and laboratory environments. In a consortium called BrainGate, researchers from Brown University and Blackrock Microsystems invented a wireless device that can potentially bring mind-control technology out of the labs and into people’s homes.

Here’s how the technology works:

  1. A small device attaches to a person’s skull and is wired to electrodes inside the brain.
  2. A brain implant collects electrical signals that are emitted by neurons inside the cortex.
  3. The skull device contains a processor that amplifies the electrical signals and digitizes the information. It also has a radio that beams the information to a receiver a few feet away.
  4. Then the information is available as a control signal which can, for example, move a cursor across a computer screen.

The device, called Cereplex-W will work at a rate of 48 MB per second, which is about the speed of a home internet connection. It only requires 30 milliwatts of battery power. It is currently being sold to laboratories for primate testing at $15,000 each. Plans for human testing are coming soon.

Source: MIT Technology Review

 

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