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In recent years neuroscientists have developed implants that allow paralyzed people to move prosthetic limbs or a computer cursor, using their thoughts to activate the machines.
A monkey moved a computer cursor using brain waves.
Cortical recordings were collected from 2 rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) performing reaching tasks by moving a computer cursor using a hand-held joystick and by controlling the cursor directly through their cortical activity decoded by a BMI (Figure 1).
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The entire lengths of the scaffold/cartilage or cartilage/cartilage (for controls) were measured with a cursor using a computer mouse to assess the integration.
In the experiments, the volunteers used their index fingers to try to move a computer cursor to a target using a touch pad.
In the new experiments, monkeys learned how to move a computer cursor with their thoughts using just one set of instructions and an unusually small number of brain cells that deliver instructions for performing movements the same way each day.
Each behavioral task required placing the computer cursor over the target using the joystick.
Following several weeks of training, Sorto learnt to control a computer cursor, drink from a bottle using a straw and make a hand-shaking gesture.
Researchers have made tremendous strides in developing ways for patients to move a computer cursor or even an artificial arm using electrodes implanted in the brain.
It turns out we learn to move a robotic arm or computer cursor with the same neurons we use to learn to ride a bicycle or catch a ball.
A computer algorithm then translates this complex pattern of activity into a signal used to control a computer cursor, robotic arm, and, maybe eventually, the patient's own limb.
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