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      • Neuralink’s device is around the size of a coin and designed to be implanted beneath the skull, with tiny wires reaching a short distance into the brain to read neuron activity. The company has already run trials in pigs and demonstrated that a monkey could play the classic video game Pong using the device.
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  2. May 8, 2024 · Neuralink’s first human patient has become so adept at using the company’s brain implant that he can now beat other players at video games.

  3. Jun 7, 2024 · Arbaugh says he uses his device for hours at a time to browse the Web, send text messages, scroll social media, navigate apps and—perhaps most importantly—play video games.

  4. May 22, 2024 · He can browse the web and play computer games whenever he wants, and Neuralink says he has set the human record for cursor control with a BCI.

  5. Aug 22, 2024 · Neuralink's second brain implant recipient shows the potential advancements in assistive technology for quadriplegics by playing video games.

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  6. Jan 30, 2024 · Neuralink’s device is around the size of a coin and designed to be implanted beneath the skull, with tiny wires reaching a short distance into the brain to read neuron activity.

    • Matthew Sparkes
    • Technology Reporter
  7. How does Neuralink work? The N1, a 4mm-square chip, is implanted into the skull. Attached to the chip are wires thinner than a human hair, which reach out into the brain.

  8. How Does Neuralink Work? Neuralink’s underlying technology works in the same way as electrophysiology, Norman explained. The electrical chemical signals in our nervous system spark as neurons communicate with one another across gaps between nerve cells known as synapses.

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