(Bloomberg) -- Neuralink Corp., Elon Musk’s brain-computer venture ... which is working on its own device. For most people, ...
Implanting chips in the human brain so that people can control computers with their minds reads like something straight out ...
Michael Mager of Precision Neuroscience, a brain implant startup rival to Elon Musk's Neuralink, sounds off on the future of ...
Precision Neuroscience Co-Founder and CEO Michael Mager discusses the changes coming to the healthcare and technology sectors ...
The new director at the FDA overseeing medical devices will confront criticisms about hasty approvals as she ushers in ...
By tapping into the enigmatic theory of how neurons transmit signals, scientists have proven they can one day build computer ...
Shortly after 2 a.m. on a Saturday in a midtown Manhattan sports bar packed with Aussies, Dr. Tom Oxley was feeling stunned.
The first generation Neuralink device has 1000 electrodes and 100 electrodes are reading at about 10 bits per second per electrode. The second generation Neuralink device should have 3000 electrodes ...
"To my knowledge, this is the first time that restoration of the ability to fluently read has ever been definitively shown in ...
Musk has business interests that depend heavily on government regulation, subsidies or policy, from Tesla’s electric cars to ...
Dr. Michelle Tarver, a veteran of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), has taken charge of the FDA’s device division at a ...
Tom Oxley, the Australian-born chief executive of brain chip company Synchron, has praised Donald Trump for having a ...