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Carnegie Mellon's noninvasive brain technology allows users to move robotic fingers by thinking about the motion, offering new possibilities for people with motor impairments.
To simulate blood flow inside brain aneurysms, researchers from Japan have developed a computational method that combines 4D ...
For chronic pain patients, though, the brain interprets even neutral sensations as pain and suffering. In effect, pain ...
Researchers have made progress against ‘the skull challenge,’ getting through barriers that prohibit ultrasound from imaging ...
For over a century, surgeons performing delicate procedures have relied on stereoscopic microscopes to gain a sense of depth.
Hit play on the player below to hear the podcast and follow along with the transcript beneath it. This transcript was ...
The chip has allowed the patient to wirelessly control a computer, as demonstrated by his ability to play video games using only his mind.
New technique preserves major nerves, blood vessels, and other critical structures in a hard-to-access area. In a ...
People who can no longer move or speak may soon have a new option: an implanted device that links their brain to a computer.
Local 4 sat down with the first patient to receive brain surgery without any incisions and the surgeon who brought this innovation to Michigan.
Brain surgery is notoriously difficult, after all your brain is responsible for managing the function of every other part of your body. But now neuroscientists in Switzerland say, extremely ...
These tiny robotic tools powered by magnetic fields could enable minimally invasive brain surgery University of Toronto Engineering professor Eric Diller and his collaborators have created a set ...