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BrainGate: First human use of high-bandwidth wireless brain-computer interface


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IMAGE: A participant in the BrainGate clinical trial uses wireless transmitters that replace the cables normally used to transmit signals from sensors inside the brain.
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Credit: Braingate.ord
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University and Providence Veterans Affairs Medical Center] Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) are an emerging assistive technology, enabling people with paralysis to type on computer screens or manipulate robotic prostheses just by thinking about moving their own bodies. For years, investigational BCIs used in clinical trials have required cables to connect the sensing array in the brain to computers that decode the signals and use them to drive external devices. ....

Brown School , United States , Pamela Garlick , Thomas Hosman , Betsy Reeves , Jessica Kelemen , John Ciancibello , Marco Vilela , Leigh Hochberg , David Brandman , Paymon Rezaii , Krishna Shenoy , Brian Franco , Blackrock Microsystems , Emad Eskandar , Sharlene Flesher , John Simeral , Arto Nurmikko , David Rosler , Jaimie Henderson , Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute At Stanford , Brown School Of Engineering , Development Center , Brown Carney Institute For Brain Science , Va Rehabilitation Research , Mgh Deane Institute ,

As the brain plans movements, the middle frontal gyrus is listening


As the brain plans movements, the middle frontal gyrus is listening
A brain-computer interface study reveals one brain region’s surprising role in planning movements exclusively in response to sounds.
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] In the swimming pool game Marco Polo, “Marco” navigates toward other players with eyes closed, responding only to hearing the other players say “Polo.” Success depends on the ability to move one’s body in response to sound cues alone, and a new study finds that a specific part of the brain may help make that possible.
The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, provides evidence that neurons in the middle frontal gyrus a part of the brain’s frontal lobe may play a role in planning body movements, but only when those movements are in response to auditory stimuli. The findings represent what could be a previously unknown function for this part of the brain and could provide a new target for researchers deve ....

New South Wales , United States , Bradley Buchbinder , Jacqueline Hynes , Carlos Vargas Irwin , Marco Polo , Brian Franco , Jessica Kelemen , John Simeral , Leigh Hochberg , Kaitlin Wilcoxen , Tommy Hosman , Nicholas Schmansky , National Institutes Of Health , Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation Research , Us Department Of Veterans Affairs , Development Center , Brown University , Brown Carney Institute For Brain Science , Scientific Reports , Carney Institute , Brain Science , Jad Sab , Massachusetts General Hospital , Sydney Cash , Veterans Affairs ,