First Woman to Use Neuralink Writes Name With Her Mind
- Patients in Great Britain will receive Elon Musk's Neuralink brain chip to help paralyzed individuals control smartphones with their thoughts.
- The clinical study, conducted with University College London Hospitals and Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, aims to recruit seven patients with severe movement impairments.
- Neuralink's N1 chip, the size of a 10p coin, connects to the brain with 128 threads, translating neural signals into commands for devices.
- Neuralink highlights that this trial represents a major step toward advancing their brain-computer interface technology for individuals with neurological disorders.
44 Articles
44 Articles
She Lost Movement at 16. Neuralink Just Helped Her Write Again—Using Her Mind
Audrey Crews, the first woman to receive Elon Musk’s Neuralink brain implant, writes her name for the first time in 20 years using only her thoughts. As part of Neuralink’s groundbreaking PRIME Study, her story marks a major milestone in brain-computer interface technology.
Audrey Crews becomes first paralysed woman to control computer with her mind, check how Musk's Neuralink helped her
Audrey Crews, who has been paralysed for 20 years has become the first women to control the computer with her mind. She used only her thoughts to move a computer cursor and write her name, all with the help of Neuralink’s brain chip.
Musk's Neuralink to test brain chips in clinical study in Great Britain
Elon Musk's brain implant company Neuralink said on Thursday it will launch a clinical study in Great Britain to test how its chips can enable patients with severe paralysis to control digital and physical tools with their thoughts.
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