Moving brain implant seeks out signals
|
So far, implanted electrodes are unable to sense consistent neuronal signals for more than a few months. Joel Burdick and Richard Andersen at California Institute of Technology in Pasadena have developed the autonomous microdrive, a device in which the electrodes sense where the strongest signal is coming from, and move towards it. The prototype is mounted on the skull and uses piezoelectric motors to move four electrodes independently of each other.
It has successfully been used to decode motor signals in rats and intention signals in monkeys. The microdrive is still too bulky to be used for people and the team is working to make a smaller version with up to 100 electrodes so that within a year they expect to be able to fit a paralysed person with a microdrive implant that will allow them to control a computer cursor and navigate the web. Autonomous microdrives could also eventually be used in other types of implant, such as the deep brain stimulators used to treat Parkinson’s disease. |
1 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Moving brain implant seeks out signals.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/2353
Near Near Future has ruined all of my plans to get my brain studded with chips to control my thousands of computers by explaining that "[s]o far, implanted electrodes are unable to sense consistent neuronal signals for more than a... Read More


Leave a comment