Tesla CEO Elon Musk-run brain-computer interface company Neuralink has reportedly received a nod from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to implant its brain chip in a second person.
The approval for the second
person to have a Neuralink chip came as the first recipient -- Noland Armagh in
the US -- detailed his emotional journey.
The latest chip in the
second recipient comes with some fixes, like embedding some of the device’s
ultrathin wires deeper into the brain, The Wall Street Journal reported on
Monday.
Musk or Neuralink were
yet to officially react to the development.
The Neuralink chip can
help restore full body control in people suffering from paralysis. The company
earlier achieved a successful brain-chip implant with Armagh and began the
applications for the second participant for the chip implant.
According to Musk, the
company can bridge "severed nerve signals to a second Neuralink in the
spine, restoring full body control”.
With the chip in his
brain, Arbaugh has enabled "telepathic control of a computer or phone just
by thinking". The Neuralink trials aim to assess the initial functionality
of the wireless brain-computer interface for enabling people with paralysis to
control external devices with their thoughts.
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