Paralyzed Woman's Neural Implant Still Firing After 1,000 Days

Recommended Videos

Greg Tito

PR for Dungeons & Dragons
Sep 29, 2005
12,070
0
0
Paralyzed Woman's Neural Implant Still Firing After 1,000 Days



The implant allows the woman to accurately move a cursor on a computer by just thinking about it.

In 2005, researchers from Brown University in Providence, RI placed a silicon electrode array in the brain of a 50-year-old woman who had been paralyzed - unable to move or speak - since she suffered a stroke in the mid-1990s. The array, about the size of a baby aspirin pill, was able to read electric signals in her brain and allow her to pinpoint a cursor on a computer screen by imagining the movement of her hand. The implant worked well, but the scientists purposefully left the implant in the head of the patient referred to as S3 to test how long a device would last inside a human body. A paper released this week reported that, 1,000 days after the implant was installed, it still functioned relatively well, hopefully proving that long-term neural implants are no longer science-fiction. The question is: where can I get one?

"This proof of concept - that after 1,000 days a woman who has no functional use of her limbs and is unable to speak can reliably control a cursor on a computer screen using only the intended movement of her hand - is an important step for the field," said Dr. Leigh Hochberg, the director of the BrainGate project.

BrainGate is a combination of the hardware of the implant and the software that translates the electrical pulses of the brain to movement on a screen. The tests that S3 underwent were meant to approximate clicking on an application's menu bar, with some targets as small as an icon on your desktop.

"Our objective with the neural interface is to reach the level of performance of a person without a disability using a mouse," said John Simeral, another researcher on the team and the author of the paper.

The team admitted that not every neuron fired as well as it did when it was first installed, but the clinical trial at least proved that more permanent implants were possible. All of the problems were from mechanical or engineering design flaws, and could be corrected with further refinements. The tests being reported on now were actually conducted in 2008, and a full clinical trial is currently being organized by Dr. Leigh Hochberg and her team. We may eventually see these implants as an option for people who have no options.

The BrainGate project is amazing, not only because it shows that many of the gameplay elements we take for granted, say in Deus Ex or BioShock, could actually happen, but because of what it means for humanity. Synthetic body implants are usually considered for cosmetic reasons or to create a "super-soldier" from an already capable human being, but this BrainGate implant allows disabled people a human experience on par with the rest of us.

With this implant, Stephen Hawking would be able to play Myst - at least easier than he could now. And that's just awesome.

Source: Brown University [http://news.brown.edu/pressreleases/2011/03/braingate]

Permalink
 

gigastar

Insert one-liner here.
Sep 13, 2010
4,419
0
0
Awesome.

Now all we need is a way to input keyboard commands and the last reason for me to preserve my hands is gone.
 

McMullen

New member
Mar 9, 2010
1,334
0
0
Sure beats the hell out of Kinect.

Wonder when they'll have a 3D neural interface that can be used for sculpting CG models. I'd bankrupt myself in a heartbeat if I could get one of those.
 

Angel Molina

New member
Mar 23, 2011
213
0
0
Neat. Actually, once i was surfing the internet and i saw this sort of headset thing that is suppose to do the same thing... I look for it if anyone is interested.

Edit: Here it is, it's called Mind Technologies Inc. [http://mindtechnologiesinc.com/]... sounds like the proper name for one of those "Evil Genius going-to-take-over-the-world hidden lair" deal.

@Gigastar... if your not going to keep those hands of yours anymore, can I have them?! =)
 

Scorched_Cascade

Innocence proves nothing
Sep 26, 2008
1,399
0
0
In short....wow

Now we just need to combine this with the unpowered rocket firing exosuits the scientists made in that other news thread and the shockwave engine from another news thread and we're really cooking with gas.
 

Radelaide

New member
May 15, 2008
2,503
0
0
While this is great, I'm not sure that I'd want it for my life. If, for almost 15 years I couldn't move a limb or speak, I hope my family would take me out back and shoot me because that's not a life.

Awesome use of technology though.
 

Catalyst6

Dapper Fellow
Apr 21, 2010
1,362
0
0
Interesting, I never thought that a implant like that could last that long without killing off all the surrounding grey matter. Shows what I know!

Also, Stephen Hawking is the only person that can play Myst without help. True fact.
 

Callate

New member
Dec 5, 2008
5,118
0
0
I suppose the real question is how difficult would it be to make such a device interact with some of the progresses in modern mechanical prostheses...
 

Count Igor

New member
May 5, 2010
1,782
0
0
gigastar said:
Awesome.

Now all we need is a way to input keyboard commands and the last reason for me to preserve my hands is gone.
Depends if you have a girlfriend or not.

Ba dum pish!


...

Oh come on, I was only kidding. I expect it's been said before, and it's completely out of character for me, but I deserve the chance, damnit!
 

Veldel

Mitth'raw'nuruodo
Legacy
Apr 28, 2010
2,263
0
1
Lost in my mind
Country
US
Gender
Guy
This is why science is so awsome YAY FOR SCIENCE


If i ever become criplled or somtthing i want this
 

Valanthe

New member
Sep 24, 2009
654
0
0
Catalyst6 said:
Interesting, I never thought that a implant like that could last that long without killing off all the surrounding grey matter. Shows what I know!

Also, Stephen Hawking is the only person that can play Myst without help. True fact.
Stephen Hawking helped Chuck Norris beat Myst, true fact.



I'm sorry I couldn't resist, don't hurt me!