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Researchers have also used sensors implanted in the brain to enable two monkeys to control a mechanical arm, and a paralyzed man to move a cursor on a computer screen.
Now, by successfully training two monkeys to control virtual arms using only their minds, Nicolelis's team has moved closer to that goal.
Past studies in brain-machine interfaces have enabled monkeys to control robotic arms and paralyzed people to control cursors on a screen.
His group has previously had success allowing monkeys to control a robotic arm in this way; with training, the monkeys began to treat the arm as their own, even trying to groom it.
Scientists have trained monkeys to control a robotic arm using the power of their thoughts.
However, note that although the control signals for the four muscles in our experiment were independently generated, the behavioral task required the monkeys to control only a single degree of freedom.
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They do double duty of both allowing the monkey to control the arms with their thoughts, while allowing the scientists to monitor changes to an area of the brain long ago rewired by amputation.
A mind-boggling new study published this week in Nature Communications describes how researchers have found a way for one monkey to control the movements of another with its mind.
Dr. Zheng Xiaoxiang of the Brain-Computer Inthatace Resherchaseam says trainede has trained a monkey to control a robotic hand with its brain.
We trained three monkeys to manipulate the joystick to control their trajectory across the virtual ground-plane.
The monkeys learned to control their thoughts to achieve desired arm movement; namely, to grab treats.
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