The Food and Drug Administration has cleared Neuralink to implant its brain chip in a second patient after the company ...
Neuralink will be able to surgically implant its device into another patient’s brain. The Wall Street Journal reports that ...
The FDA was apparently satisfied by Neuralink’s proposals to fix the errors that were reported in the company’s first patient ...
More recently, some of the threads in Noland's implant have begun to fail by retracting from his brain tissue. The issue ...
Elon Musk's first Neuralink patient completed 100 days of surgery. The patient had received Neuralink's brain implant, which ...
Elon Musk announced Friday that his startup, Neuralink, is accepting applications for a second person to get a cybernetic brain implant as part of an ongoing trial.
Neuralink will be able to surgically implant its device into another patient’s brain. The Wall Street Journal reports that the company was approved to move forward with a second procedure months ...
This marks another stride in the advancement of brain-computer interface technology, which holds promise for treating ...
Neuralink is accepting applications for a second human participant in its ongoing brain-computer interface (BCI) implant ...
Elon Musk’s Neuralink is now accepting applications for a second patient to receive its brain-computer interface, just five months after Noland Arbaugh became the first human to have the startup ...
Things haven't gone entirely according to plan with Neuralink's first human patient: as the company conceded after questions from the Wall Street Journal, wires inside the patient's brain appear ...
The human patient reportedly is still able to use his implant safely. Neuralink Neuralink quietly published an update earlier this week on the first patient to receive its experimental brain ...