The current generation of neural implants assimilate vast amounts of neural activity, these brain signals travel through wires to a computer. Lately, when researchers tried to create wireless brain-computer interfaces or this purpose, the result was a critical power amassment, just for data transmission which could impair the health of the patients. What was the possible researched solution? A new study in this field suggests cutting the wires that transmit the heat.
The study was conducted by researchers at Stanford who have been working for years to advance a technology which could help people with paralysis to regain the use of their limbs and enable amputees to use their thoughts to control the prostheses and interact with computers.
The research team has been focusing on improving the brain-computer interface, which is a device implanted beneath the skull on the surface of the patient's brain. This implant connects the human nervous system to an electronic device that might, for instance, assist them to help someone with a neurological condition like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called Lou Gehrig's disease or restore some motor control to a person with a spinal cord injury.
The current generation of these devices records enormous amounts of neural activity, to transmit these brain signals through wires to a computer. But when researchers have tried to create wireless brain-computer interfaces to do this, it took so much power to transmit the data that the devices would generate too much heat to be safe for the patient.
A team led by electrical engineers and neuroscientists Krishna Shenoy, PhD, and Boris Murmann, PhD, and neurosurgeon and neuroscientist Jaimie Henderson, MD, have shown how it would be possible to create a wireless device, capable of gathering and transmitting accurate neural signals, but using a tenth of the power required by current wire-enabled systems. These wireless devices would look more natural than the wired models and give patients a freer range of motion.
Graduate student Nir Even-Chen and postdoctoral fellow Dante Muratore, PhD, describe the team's approach in a Nature Biomedical Engineering paper.
The team's neuroscientists identified the specific neural signals needed to control a prosthetic device, such as a robotic arm or a computer cursor. The team's electrical engineers then designed the circuitry that would enable a future, wireless brain-computer interface to process and transmit these carefully identified and isolated signals, using less power and thus making it safe to implant the device on the surface of the brain.
To test their idea, the researchers collected neuronal data from three nonhuman primates and one human participant in a (BrainGate) clinical trial.
As the subjects performed movement tasks, such as positioning a cursor on a computer screen, the researchers took measurements. The findings validated their hypothesis that a wireless interface could accurately control an individual's motion by recording a subset of action-specific brain signals, rather than acting like the wired device and collecting brain signals in bulk.
The next step will be to build an implant based on this new approach and proceed through a series of tests toward the ultimate goal.
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