Search results
Feb 28, 2023 · A "biocomputer" powered by human brain cells could be developed within our lifetime, according to Johns Hopkins University researchers who expect such technology to exponentially expand the...
- New technology allows researchers to precisely, flexibly ...
Researchers have developed a noninvasive technology...
- New technology allows researchers to precisely, flexibly ...
Every time we want to move, feel or think, a tiny electrical impulse is generated and sent incredibly quickly from one neuron to another. Scientists have developed devices which can detect some...
Dec 11, 2023 · The technology could also be used to study the brain, says Arti Ahluwalia, a biomedical engineer at the University of Pisa in Italy, because brain organoids can replicate the architecture...
Dec 15, 2023 · When the researchers stimulated the system, nicknamed Brainoware, with electrical pulses, the brain organoid responded by forming new neuronal connections. An artificial intelligence (AI) program then decoded how those connections processed the electrical signals as the organoid received them.
Jun 17, 2024 · Researchers have developed a noninvasive technology combining a holographic acoustic device with genetic engineering that allows them to precisely target affected neurons in the brain, creating...
Mar 25, 2019 · New technologies that can locate cells in the living brain and measure the cells’ individual activity, none of which were used in the Nature Medicine study, may eventually put to rest any...
People also ask
Can new technology find cells in the brain?
How can AI reconstructed human brain cells?
Could brain stem cells make a computer more powerful?
Can brain cells grow a memory center?
Could a 'biocomputer' be developed within our lifetime?
Could Google's AI reconstructed the brain's intricacies?
May 9, 2024 · Incredible brain imagery is now possible with the help of Google's AI. A joint team of Google researchers and Harvard neuroscientists have reconstructed nearly every cell and all of its connections within a small volume of human brain tissue.