Brain-computer interfaces are also progressing rapidly. Domestically, there have been two major recent developments.



BrainCo's NEO-ONE SCI implantable system received approval from the National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) in March, making it the world’s first officially approved invasive BCI medical device.

BrainTech's "Three-All System"—fully implantable, fully wireless, and fully functional—launched GCP clinical trials at Huashan Hospital on July 7.

Overseas, an ALS patient has been living independently at home with a brain-computer interface for nearly two years. Using his implanted BCI system, he outputs over 180k sentences per day, averaging 56 words per minute with 99% accuracy.

He can communicate, work, and play games without needing a research team nearby.

It seems that brain-computer interfaces are getting closer to practical, real-world use.
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