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The device has allowed the first patient to play video games, browse the internet, post on social media and move a cursor on his laptop. ... Musk said 400 of the implant's electrodes on the second ...
The company said the patient, identified as Alex, did not face issues of "thread retraction", unlike Noland Arbaugh, Neuralink's first patient who received the implant in January. The threads have ...
Earlier this year, Neuralink successfully implanted the device in the second patient, who has been using it to play video games and learn how to design 3D objects. (Reporting by Bhanvi Satija in ...
In February, Musk claimed progress on Neuralink's first patient and last month said his start-up had plans to implant a chip in a second patient. On Friday, he told Fridman the second implant has ...
Noland Arbaugh (born 1993 or 1994) is an American quadriplegic known for being the first human recipient of Neuralink's brain-computer interface (BCI) implant. [1] He gained attention for his use of the device to regain digital autonomy after a spinal cord injury left him paralyzed.
The video makes Neuralink one of at least three companies to have released evidence of a functioning brain implant. The two others, Blackrock Neurotech and Synchron, both have yearslong head ...
Canadian neurosurgeons in partnership with Elon Musk's Neuralink have regulatory approval to recruit six patients with paralysis willing to have a thousand electrode contacts in their brains. The ...
Noland Arbaugh, the 29-year-old patient who was paralyzed below the shoulder after a diving accident, played chess on his laptop and moved the cursor using the Neuralink device. The implant seeks ...