Breakthrough Brain-Computer Interface Decodes Self-Talk
Stanford researchers trained a brain-computer interface to decode inner speech with up to 74% accuracy from a vocabulary of 125,000 words, offering communication aid for paralysis.
7 Articles
7 Articles
18 months after surgery, Elon Musk’s first brain chip patient is playing Mario Kart and planning to start a business
Noland Arbaught, first Neuralink brain chip implant recipient, recently shared his transformative experience 18 months post-surgery. The device allows him to control technology independently, aiding his studies and personal goals.


Big Tech Could Soon Use Brain Chips To Read Your Innermost Thoughts: Study
Big Tech Could Soon Use Brain Chips To Read Your Innermost Thoughts: Study A new study out of Stanford University reveals that neural implants, also known as brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), might not just help paralyzed individuals communicate - they could potentially lay bare your innermost thoughts to Big Tech. Published in the medical journal Cell, the research shows these devices can decode brain signals to produce synthesized speech faste…
Stanford Researchers Are Working On A Brain-computer Interface That Can Decode Imagined Speech - Stuff South Africa
Stanford Medicine researchers have been working on a new brain-computer interface (BCI) chip intended to restore speech to folks who have severe difficulties verbalising anything. The implantable BCI lives in a subject’s motor cortex — the area that controls movement — and collects signals when patients attempt to speak. These are then translated into speech via a computer algorithm. The process works by training a computer to “recognize repeata…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium