The Brain Can Detect Touch through Tools, Confirms New Research0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- December 27, 2019
A new study explores the impressive capacity of the brain to feel contact on a foreign object.
A new study explores the impressive capacity of the brain to feel contact on a foreign object.
Subjects in the study simply needed to be given live feedback of their brain activity in order to control their brain waves.
In recent years, scientists have made impressive headway with organoids—clumps of tissue or bundles of cells that resemble a miniature version of a human organ. But as the technology continues to progress at rapid speeds, are the ethical considerations playing catch up?
A man paralyzed from the shoulders down has been able to walk using a pioneering four-limb robotic system, or exoskeleton, that is commanded and controlled by signals from his brain.
Scientists think devices could allow people to communicate telepathically or the paralysed to walk in the next decades
Certain nerve cells sync their firing just before a recollection resurfaces
Study funded by Facebook aims to improve communication with paralysed patients
People robbed of the ability to talk due to a stroke or another medical condition may soon have real hope of regaining a voice thanks to technology that harnesses brain activity to produce synthesized speech, researchers said on Wednesday.
Zapping the brains of people over 60 with a mild electrical current improved a form of memory enough that they performed like people in their 20s, a new study found.
A new rat study hints at damage during adolescence