News

A groundbreaking achievement in brain-computer interface technology: an ALS patient uses a Neuralink implant to edit and narrate a YouTube video.
Merging neurons with semiconductors signals a shift in brain–machine interface design and neuromorphic engineering.
Last November, Bradford G. Smith got a brain implant from Elon Musk’s company Neuralink. The device, a set of thin wires ...
Rapid technological advancements are increasingly narrowing the line between humans and machines. At the forefront of this progress is a brain-computer interface (BCI), which creates a direct ...
InBrain Neuroelectronics has won a €4m ($4.5m) grant from the Spanish Ministry of Industry and Tourism to develop its ...
“Neural data is the most private, personal, and powerful information we have—and no company should be allowed to harvest it ...
Brad Smith, an ALS patient, becomes the first nonverbal person to receive a Neuralink brain implant. This breakthrough offers hope for enhanced communication and interaction for those with severe ...
The Ministry provisionally awarded €53.2 million in funding on May 5, 2025, to support 37 breakthrough projects across 11 autonomous communities. INBRAIN’s project was one of several selected for ...
The first nonverbal Neuralink patient to receive the chip implant is offering a glimpse into how he uses the technology – editing and narrating a YouTube video using signals from his brain.
While polling has become the dominant approach in high performance systems today, both existing methods exact costly overhead ...
Brad Smith is the third person in the world to get a brain chip implant with Elon Musk's Neuralink, and the first nonverbal ALS patient to do so.