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Chad Bouton, the vice president of advanced engineering at Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, New York, ...
Researchers from Georgia Tech have developed a tiny, minimally invasive, brain-computer interface which they reckon is ...
A team of engineers at Georgia Institute of Technology's Wearable Intelligent Systems and Healthcare Center, working with ...
Although it’s still experimental, they hope the brain-computer interface could someday help give voice to those unable to ...
Brain-computer interfaces are typically unwieldy, which makes using them on the move a non-starter. A new neural interface small enough to be attached between the user’s hair follicles keeps working ...
The company has partnered with Nvidia to develop “cognitive AI,” which it says will allow people with severe physical disabilities to have more natural interactions with the world around them.
The semi-invasive system developed by CIBR and its affiliated start-up NeuCyber NeuroTech have completed their first three human implants.
this breakthrough is also a major milestone toward heterogeneous computing – where quantum and classical systems work together seamlessly, unlocking new possibilities that neither can achieve alone.