Neuralink plan Another U.S. clinical trial is to begin in October, using implants to convert ideas into text. The study will be conducted through a waiver of the FDA research equipment. “If you imagine saying something, we’ll be able to pick it up,” Neuralink President DJ SEO explain This week.
The idea is to help people with speech disorders communicate through their thoughts. Neuralink is one of the companies that test implants that help patients control their computers. It may include using a virtual keyboard. Translating ideas directly from the patient’s phonological cortex can speed things up by cutting the middleman.
The company has conducted five other clinical trials. this First in the United States. Since then, it has added research Canadathis U.K. and United Arab Emirates.
Neuralink’s plan for those with severe disabilities sounds like a utopian science fiction novel. No matter anything else, success in this field can change lives for them. Still, this is a commercial company with a majority stake in Elon Musk. Neuralink’s long-term plan is hard not to worry about.
“We are currently envisioning a world where in about three to four years there will be a healthy person who will get nerve fusion,” the SEO said. The company’s president hints at what it might be. “We think it’s actually possible to talk to the latest AI models or LLM models at a speed of mind, even faster than you can speak, and be able to effectively retrieve that information through AirPods, effectively closing the loop,” he said.
Our world today reveals that things go wrong when we turn humans too much to technology. You can Smartphone addiction and Social Media Algorithm and move forward quickly (allegedly) AI supports suicide. Consumer brain implants can be painted with the darkest images of our excellent science fiction work. think Neurological methodStar Trek’s Borg or CyberCybernetwork software.
Add what we know Musk’s thoughts on politicsand it’s hard not to at least be a little cynical. Hopefully this technology will be improved enough to help people in need, but not too many, but not too many to swallow humans?