污污的视频在线观看 I 自拍视频区 I 国产在线一 I 超级碰在线观看 I 农村妇女精品一区二区 I 尤物网在线视频 I 久久精品资源 I 毛片直接看 I 国产3区 I 黄色网炮 I 日本在线视频免费 I 美国特级片 I 亚洲免费综合 I 中文字幕在线观看视频免费 I 国产精品夜夜夜爽阿娇 I 欧美干干干 I 男生插女生下面免费视频 I 又黄又爽一区二区三区 I 污污在线播放 I 国产美女性生活视频 I 久久9966 I 扒开jk护士狂揉免费 I 伊人春色欧美 I 成人v精品蜜桃久久一区 I 日韩电影免 I 欧洲精品码一区二区三区 I 九色亚洲 I 外国性调教视频 I 91精品国产综合久久小美女 I 久久久99精品成人片中文字幕 I 国产精品毛片更新无码 I 一区二区亚洲欧美在线 I 婷婷五点开心六点丁 I 国产毛片a高清日本在线 I 国精产品一线二线三线av I 亚洲美女一级 I 国产成一区二区 I 一级成人网 I 午夜精品久久久久久久99水蜜桃

Wuxi Gotele Metal Products Co., Ltd : CN EN
Home >>News >>News of Machinery and Equipment

Brain Computer Interfaces

Brain Computer Interfaces

Today, implanted electrode devices used to stimulate the brain are extremely rudimentary and basic. They typically only contain a few electrodes that are used to mitigate the effects of neurological disorders such as Parkinson’s, epilepsy, etc. Few patients suffering from these conditions opt for the implantation of such devices because the extreme invasiveness of the implantation procedure and the size of the devices. In order for these devices to be used regularly they would need to have a less invasive implantation process, more channels that can interact with the brain, and be smaller in size. These improvements would revolutionize brain machine interfaces and expand the ways in which artificial systems can support brain function. Thanks to a new four-year $15.8 million dollar grant for the U.S. Department of Defense’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, widely known as DARPA, Columbia Engineering Professor Ken Shepard is striving to create an implanted brain-interface device. 

If Shepard and his team are successful the small size and large scale of the device could provide the opportunity for transformation interfaces to the brain, this could transform the lives of people with neurodegenerative diseases as well as people who are hearing and visually impaired. Shepard admits the complex nature of the project, “This is a highly ambitious project for Columbia, indeed for all of us, and we are very excited to address such a challenging issue." Sheppard’s team includes world renowned researchers from institutions such as Baylor, Duke, NYU, and Northwestern just to name a few. The team is focusing on the creation of an implantable brain-interface device at the scale of one million channels to allow for recording and stimulation from the sensory cortex. By the end of the four year grant they hope to obtain regulatory approval to begin experiments in humans. Shepard admits that this is a very aggressive timeline, and he believes the only way to achieve this is “use an all-electrical approach that involves a massive surface-recording array with more than one million electrodes fabricated as a monolithic device on a single complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit. We are working with the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company as our foundry partner." In order to be successful Shepard and his team need to exploit the full capabilities of the CMOS technology as well as the associated manufacturing capabilities, using monolithic integration of stimulation/recording electrodes in the platform. By using state-of-the-art silicon nanoelectronics and applying them in unusual ways the team hopes to be develop a comfortable, light, and flexible device that can move with the brain tissue. If the team is successful the lives of thousands suffering from degenerative brain conditions and those who are visually or hearing impaired could be improved substantially. 


HomeTelProductsContact
CN EN