Neuralink begins testing on humans: reactions from the scientific community
Neuralink's move towards human testing raises debates in the scientific field: on the one hand there is hope, on the other there is concern about the implications.
Neuralink's move towards human testing raises debates in the scientific field: on the one hand there is hope, on the other there is concern about the implications.
After a long process, Neuralink's futuristic brain-computer interface got the green light for the first human tests.
Neuralink aims to solve some neurological "failures", but while waiting to get there, it aims to become a "second mind" able to connect ours with a computer network.
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One year after the first presentation, the Neuralink Demo is enriched with details and functions. And the FDA is now close to authorizing human testing.
At Menlo Park they say they are ready to present by December a functional and wearable prototype of a device for writing with thoughts
The human-computer connection will be able to read and write a huge amount of information. In the Neuralink presentation the first, important vision.
2 years of waiting, clues, funds and mysteries: we will finally know what Neuralink does, the startup of Elon Musk who wants to connect our brain to a computer