• last year
New York-based startup Synchron has developed a pioneering technology enabling paralyzed patients to complete simple tasks on a computer thanks to a brain implant that detects neural activity. Rodney Gorham, a Melbourne resident living with ALS, has been integral to the trail. Gorham is now able to pinpoint letters on a screen using his eyes and can “click” on words with his mind. Synchron hopes to get approval next year from health authorities to market a final version of the device.

Category

🗞
News
Transcript
00:00 [sound of engine]
00:02 [click]
00:14 [click]
00:16 [click]
00:20 [click]
00:29 [click]
00:57 [click]
00:57 [beep]
01:04 [click]
01:14 [click]
01:16 [click]
01:18 Do you have any regrets about using the stamp rod or...
01:26 if anyone was in your same situation today, would you tell them to do the same thing?
01:31 Excellent.
01:33 [click]
01:35 [click]
01:37 [click]
01:39 [click]
01:42 It sits on the surface of the brain and it listens to what's happening in the brain
01:50 around the area of the brain called the motor cortex that controls the movement of your arms and legs.
01:55 And then predicts what you're trying to move and it converts that into a signal that goes out of the body to control a personal device.
02:03 Brain, device, blood vessel.
02:08 We see no adverse events, but in addition to that we've been really fortunate to see that
02:23 the majority of people who have been implanted so far can use the technology readily.
02:30 [clunk]
02:31 [clunk]
02:33 [clunk]
02:34 [clunk]
02:36 [clunk]
02:37 [BLANK_AUDIO]

Recommended