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Medicine

7 People Now Have Neuralink Brain Implant 29

Seven people have now received Neuralink's N1 brain implant, which enables individuals with ALS or spinal cord injuries to control a computer with their thoughts. PCMag reports: In a February 2025 update, Neuralink confirmed that three people had received its brain-computer interface (BCI). That increased to five by June, when it also reported a $650 million funding round. We're now at seven, Barrow tweeted today; Neuralink retweeted that message.

Six of the seven are participating in the PRIME study, conducted by Barrow, which handles the implantations from its Phoenix, Arizona, office. It aims to prove that the N1 implant, the R1 surgical robot, and the N1 User App on the computer are safe and effective, according to the program brochure. (No BCIs have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration.)

Participants in the study get the implant through a surgery in which a custom-built robotic arm drills a hole in their skull and implants the device. The implant connects to a computer via Bluetooth, allowing patients to move the cursor, select words to type, browse the web, and even play video games -- a favorite activity of Neuralink's first human patient, Noland Arbaugh, who can do this all without moving any limbs or fingers. [...] Arbaugh, now 31, became paralyzed during a diving accident. Other Neuralink patients include Alex, a former machine parts builder who lost function of his arms and uses his N1 Implant to design 3D machine parts with computer-aided design (CAD). The third patient is Brad, the first person with ALS to receive the N1 implant, according to Barrow.

Mike is the fourth patient, and "the first person with a full-time job to use the N1 Implant," Barrow says. "He worked as a survey technician for city government and spent the majority of his time in the field until his ALS made the work too difficult. Like Alex, Mike has used CAD software with his Neuralink device to continue doing survey work from home and provide for his family." The fifth publicly named patient is RJ, a veteran who became paralyzed after a motorcycle accident, according to the University of Miami. The other two patients remain anonymous, but we can expect Neuralink to continue recruiting more people (here's how to apply).
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7 People Now Have Neuralink Brain Implant

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  • Make that 8 (Score:3, Funny)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Saturday June 28, 2025 @03:12AM (#65481702) Journal

    ...Elon's odd & moody behavior of late is possibly due to more than just ketamine.

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Saturday June 28, 2025 @03:44AM (#65481724)

    The problem Neuralink and some of the other BCI companies had was that the electrodes retract after a few months -- they had to remove the first Neuralink recipient's transplant within a month (and btw yeah: Neuralink isn't the only one nor the first .. in fact they're not yet the leader -- they will be the leader soon though due to the funding levels and fame). The leader (currently, though not for long) FYI is probably Braingate. https://www.braingate.org/ [braingate.org] though blackjack neurotech isn't far behind https://blackrockneurotech.com... [blackrockneurotech.com]

    • Source? What I have read was that while many of the Probes did not properly stay inserted on the first patient the results were, and still are, very positive. I have seen nothing in the literature stating it was replaced.
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Saturday June 28, 2025 @04:50AM (#65481784)

    Because that was always the limiting factor before and, AFAIK, it remains unsolved. If you have to get a new one every 2-3 years, it is going to be a massive problem.

  • The problem this tech faces, of course, is how to interface with the brain. Generally speaking, they rely on the person basically reprogramming themselves, i.e., learning how to interface themselves to the chip.

    I wonder if the real way forward wouldn't be to read brain activation patterns, rather than trying to interface directly with neurons.

    • Well, yeah... I would think a skull-cap of sensors (hooked into an amplifier) in the right places on the skull cap could read the impulses that would, let's say, flip someone the bird, and pulse the muscles in your arm to do so. Or, it should be a thing like the cochlear implant, where the root of the thing stays in the skull and connected, and you clip/attach/whatever a thing on it to read the brain pulses to do a thing with your arms or legs.
      I know the tech is still in it's infancy, so it'll be interesti

  • by Tschaine ( 10502969 ) on Saturday June 28, 2025 @12:39PM (#65482364)

    On the one hand, I have no doubt that the benefit is enormous for everyone who gets one of these installed.

    On the other hand, how many times have we all looked a high-tech device and thought, "wow, but I bet next year's model will do be better and/or cost less."

    I can't even imagine how tough that decision would be when the baseline for "better" is already a life-changing improvement, the cost is astronomical, the installation procedure is brain surgery, and the upgrade procedure is brain surgery again.

    • It's not astronomical cost. A robot (under supervision) does the brain surgery and installation in under 20 minutes (under general anesthesia and all that of course).

      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
        And soon the cost for such brain implants may be paid for by the advertisements played out directly from the implant into the receiver's brain, plus the profit from selling the personal data harvested from the brain. Just a few more technical advances required...
        • The claim in the presentations was that the total manufacturing cost of the electrodes got reduced from $350 to $15. The rest of it is basically similar electronics as an AirTag.

      • Lol guise it's not expensive. Just an anesthesiologist and operating room. The expensive part is done by a robot. Right?

        • Yes, watch their presentation. They said the operation is under 20 mins, and also the next generation of electrodes total manufacturing cost per chip would be $15 (down f

  • Gonna get so much synaptic seepage from these things. Maybe Elon never watched Johnny Nemonic

  • by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Saturday June 28, 2025 @03:23PM (#65482742) Homepage
    7 People with a strange compulsion to buy a nazimobile and a flame thrower.
  • is whether Elon is able to press a button and remotely blow up the Neuralinks while they're still in these people's heads, just cuz they posted something to Twitter that isn't approved by the regime?

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