Elon Musk’s first brain chip patient plays online chess with his mind
Elon Musk's Neuralink released new footage of his brain implant in action on Wednesday — a rectangular man playing computer games with just his mind.
In the year A March 20 live-to-X recording of Musk's Neuralink shows 29-year-old Noland Arbaugh — a quadriplegic implanted with a Neuralink device — controlling a computer cursor with his thoughts and using it to play games of Chess and Civilization VI. .
“It's like using the power on the cursor, I look somewhere on the screen and it moves where I want,” he said.
“I can't even describe how good it is to do this.”
https://t.co/OMIeGGjYtG
— Neuralink (@neuralink) March 20, 2024
“One of the first times you really took control of me was when I stayed up until 6:00 p.m. playing my sixth game,” Arbaugh explained.
Eight years ago, the forty-year-old suffered a severe spinal cord injury in a “freak diving accident” that left him completely paralyzed below the shoulders.
Arbau said the surgery went smoothly and he was discharged from the hospital a day after the device was implanted on Sunday, January 28.
“It still changed my life,” Arbaugh said. “The surgery was very easy.”
Forty said some elements of the technology still need improvement, but others implored people with neurological disorders to step forward and participate in human trials.
“I don't want people to think this is the end of the journey, there's still a lot of work to do,” he said. “I say to people who are thinking about applying for human trials or looking for some way to help with that, do your part.”
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The Neuralink brain implant aims to help those with debilitating injuries or paralysis to communicate with a phone or computer through thought alone, Musk said in a Jan. 30 post to X. Neuralink's first product is called Telepathy.
“Imagine Stephen Hawking communicating faster than speed typing or an auctioneer. This is the purpose.
Neuralink first opened applications for human clinical trials in September 2023, after the company received approval from the United States Food and Drug Administration in May 2023. The organization.
The Neuralink device – also called a brain-computer interface (BCI) – works by opening a small section in the patient's skull and using a surgical robot to implant the chip.
The device consists of “extremely fine and flexible fibers” and is implanted in the region of the brain that controls the urge to move.
Once implanted, the device becomes “cosmetic invisible” and acts as a recording and transmitting device to transmit data wirelessly to an app that converts the patient's thoughts into digital motion on a device.
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