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Biotech Medicine

Neuralink Shows First Brain-Chip Patient Playing Online Chess Using His Mind 52

Neuralink, the brain-chip startup founded by Elon Musk, showed its first patient using his mind to play online chess. Reuters reports: Noland Arbaugh, the 29-year-old patient who was paralyzed below the shoulder after a diving accident, played chess on his laptop and moved the cursor using the Neuralink device. The implant seeks to enable people to control a computer cursor or keyboard using only their thoughts. Arbaugh had received an implant from the company in January and could control a computer mouse using his thoughts, Musk said last month.

"The surgery was super easy," Arbaugh said in the video streamed on Musk's social media platform X, referring to the implant procedure. "I literally was released from the hospital a day later. I have no cognitive impairments. I had basically given up playing that game," Arbaugh said, referring to the game Civilization VI, "you all (Neuralink) gave me the ability to do that again and played for 8 hours straight."

Elaborating on his experience with the new technology, Arbaugh said that it is "not perfect" and they "have run into some issues." "I don't want people to think that this is the end of the journey, there's still a lot of work to be done, but it has already changed my life," he added.
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Neuralink Shows First Brain-Chip Patient Playing Online Chess Using His Mind

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  • Will it fight Batman!?
  • This guy has control over his head and neck. He can look around and talk. If he wasn't able to play a game like Civilization, a lot of people let him down.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 21, 2024 @04:36AM (#64332863)

      As it says in the summary, these are very early days. With the monkey that Neuralink trained to play pong with his mind, they first trained him to play using a joystick, while they recorded his brainwaves, and that data was then used to determine the monkey's intentions when the physical joystick was removed from the equation. This guy however was already paralysed when he got his implant, so they can't use the same approach, he can't use a joystick. They don't have any implants fitted to anyone who isn't paralysed either, so they don't even have brainwaves from another human. That might not help anyway, who knows what your motor cortex starts doing once you've been paralysed for a while. So I imagine it will take a lot longer for this guy to get to the point of playing pong smoothly with his mind like the monkey could, but the fact that he's got as far as he has this early says to me that they'll probably get there eventually.

  • Somehow, using your brain to play chess sounds less challenging than every other game. Suddenly, Pong and Donkey Kong will require a lot more brain power to win.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      He's only had the implant a few weeks, and he's the first human to have one. I imagine they will be collecting and analysing data for many months before they can fully dial it in. The fact that he can do anything at all with it at this point is hugely impressive.

  • by Jorgensen ( 313325 ) on Thursday March 21, 2024 @05:37AM (#64332929) Homepage

    Surely the question (in the tech world) would be: Can he play Doom with it?

    • Surely the question (in the tech world) would be: Can he play Doom with it?

      Surely we need to realize not many 29-year olds know what you’re talking about.

      When you were playing Doom, they were still in the womb.

    • Cyberpunk 2077 or Deus Ex might be more fitting.

    • Well, they made it work on a lawnmower, so someone will do it eventually. Probably not on his Neuralink, though.
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Thursday March 21, 2024 @07:25AM (#64333125)

    Because the main show-stopper is that so far all these implants had to be removed after a few months again, making this pretty far removed from practical usefulness.

    That little, all-critical detail seems to be very loudly absent from all press-releases and descriptions I have seen.

  • ...do you play chess *without* using your mind?

  • Other Chess Computers: What's with the poorly-programmed processor?

  • I'd like to see anyone play chess without using their mind. Don't they mean without using his hands?
  • He might want to find a new shirt if he wants advertising $s from Firaxis.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

I do not fear computers. I fear the lack of them. -- Isaac Asimov

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