'BrainGate' Brain-Machine-Interface takes shape
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Article Summary
December 7, 2004 An implantable, brain-computer interface the size of an aspirin has been clinically tested on humans by American company Cyberkinetics. The 'BrainGate' device can provide paralysed or motor-impaired patients a mode of communication through the translation of thought into direct computer control. The technology driving this Brain-Machine-Interface breakthrough has a myriad of potential applications, including the development of human augmentation for military and commercial purposes.
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Rex Alfie Lee
- November 9, 2009 @ 12:19 UTC













