A new, high-performance brain-computer interface (BCI) can be rapidly implanted through a minimally invasive procedure. The ...
MIT researchers are using living cells to target diseased brain areas and deliver tiny electronic devices that can modulate ...
Peering into the human brain has never been easy. For decades, neuroscientists have relied on heavy, expensive machines to measure blood flow and oxygen levels that reveal how the brain works. These ...
By directly communicating with the brain, a new wireless device could someday help restore lost senses or manage pain without medications, its developers say.
A flexible film bristling with tiny sensors could make surgery safer for patients with a brain tumor or severe epilepsy. The experimental film, which looks like Saran wrap, rests on the brain's ...
Brain-computer-interface startup Paradromics today announced that surgeons successfully inserted the company’s brain implant into a patient and safely removed it after about 10 minutes. It’s a step ...
Restoring lost senses or delivering precise brain signals has required invasive hardware and can’t mimic the brain’s natural, distributed activity patterns. This platform shows the brain can learn to ...
Brain implants hold immense promise for restoring function in patients with paralysis, epilepsy and other neurological disorders. But a team of researchers has discovered that bacteria can invade the ...
Promising new treatments for neurological disorders are aimed at transforming disease management through neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to alter its structure and function to adapt to changes in ...
The FDA recently cleared this device for sale in the U.S. Research shows it can improve moderate to severe depression ...