Researchers at Brown University have succeeded in
creating the first wireless, implantable, rechargeable, long-term
brain-computer interface. The wireless BCIs have been implanted in pigs and
monkeys for over 13 months without issue, and human subjects are next.A tether
limits the mobility of the patient, and also the real-world testing that can be
performed by the researchers. Brown’s wireless BCI allows the subject to move
freely, dramatically increasing the quantity and quality of data that can be
gathered — instead of watching what happens when a monkey moves its arm,
scientists can now analyze its brain activity during complex activity, such as
foraging or social interaction. Obviously, once the wireless implant is
approved for human testing, being able to move freely — rather than strapped to
a chair in the lab — would be rather empowering.
Brown’s wireless BCI, fashioned out of hermetically
sealed titanium, looks a lot like a pacemaker. Inside there’s a li-ion battery,
an inductive (wireless) charging loop, a chip that digitizes the signals from
your brain, and an antenna for transmitting those neural spikes to a nearby
computer. The BCI is connected to a small chip with 100 electrodes protruding
from it, which, in this study, was embedded in the somatosensory cortex or
motor cortex. These 100 electrodes produce a lot of data, which the BCI
transmits at 24Mbps over the 3.2 and 3.8GHz bands to a receiver that is one
meter away. The BCI’s battery takes two hours to charge via wireless inductive
charging, and then has enough juice to last for six hours of use.
One of the features that the Brown researchers seem
most excited about is the device’s power consumption, which is just 100
milliwatts. For a device that might eventually find its way into humans, frugal
power consumption is a key factor that will enable all-day, highly mobile usage.
Amusingly, though, the research paper notes that the wireless charging does
cause significant warming of the device, which was “mitigated by liquid cooling
the area with chilled water during the recharge process and did not notably
affect the animal’s comfort.” Another important factor is that the researchers
were able to extract high-quality, “rich” neural signals from the wireless
implant — a good indicator that it will also help human neuroscience, if and
when the device is approved.Moving forward, the wireless BCI is very much a
part of BrainGate — the Brown University research group that’s tasked with
bringing these neurological technologies to humans. So far, the pinnacle of
BrainGate’s work is a robotic arm controlled by a tethered BCI, which paralyzed
patients can use to feed themselves. While the wireless BCI isn’t approve for
human use (and there’s no indication that they’re seeking approval yet), it was
designed specifically so that it should be safe for human use.The Brown
researchers now intend to develop a different version of the device to help
them study the motor cortex of an animal with Parkinson’s disease. They are
also working on reducing the device’s size, improving its safety and
reliability, and increasing the amount of data it can transmit — for the
eventual goal of equipping those with movement disabilities, or elective
transhumanists, with a wireless brain-computer interface.
0 comments:
Post a Comment