Stentrode is the only implantable brain-computer interface that does not require open brain surgery and is currently in clinical trials SAN FRANCISCO & NEW YORK & MELBOURNE, Australia--(BUSINESS WIRE) ...
The first implanted brain-computer interface has been turned on in the US. It allows a person to control a computer using only their thoughts. Though the tech is clunky, it could one day be used by ...
Human trials for a first-of-a-kind device designed to treat the brain via electrical stimulation have brought some very promising results. Called Stentrode, the implant has the potential to treat a ...
Synchron, the startup behind an FDA breakthrough neuroprosthesis device that aims to give patients with paralysis the ability to control digital devices with their thoughts, has been cleared by the ...
Under DARPA's Reliable Neural-Interface Technology program, a team from the University of Melbourne has created a new device called a 'stentrode' that, when implanted near one's brain, is able to read ...
The key to returning mobility is a tiny, matchstick-sized device called a stentrode. It will be implanted into a blood vessel next to the motor cortex, the brain’s control centre – bypassing the need ...
Researchers demonstrated the success of a fully implantable wireless medical device, the Stentrode™ brain-computer interface (BCI), designed to allow patients with severe paralysis to resume daily ...
Medical researchers have created a new minimally invasive brain-machine interface, giving people with spinal cord injuries new hope to walk again with the power of thought. The brain machine interface ...
The Stentrode ™ is a device that is placed inside a blood vessel of the brain located in an area that controls movement (motor cortex). It is the only investigational technology of its kind that does ...
Open brain surgery is about as dangerous as it sounds, but for sufferers of conditions like Parkinson's and epilepsy it can be the only way to relieve their symptoms. Unfortunately, this means ...
Australian neurologist Tom Oxley was on vacation in the US in November 2010 when he decided to do a bit of work. So he pitched an electrode array for reading brainwaves to the Defense Advanced ...
SAN FRANCISCO & NEW YORK & MELBOURNE, Australia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Synchron, a neurovascular bioelectronics medicine company, today announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has ...