SAN FRANCISCO: Neuralink on Wednesday streamed a video of its first human patient playing computer chess with his mind and talking about the brain implant making that possible.

Noland Arbaugh, 29, who was left paralysed from the shoulders down by a diving accident eight years ago, told of playing chess and the videogame “Civilisation” as well as taking Japanese and French lessons by controlling a computer screen cursor with his brain.

“It’s crazy, it really is. It’s so cool,” said Arbaugh, who joked of having telepathy thanks to Elon Musk’s Neuralink startup.

Musk’s neurotechnology company installed a brain implant in its first human test subject in January, with the billionaire head of Tesla and X touting it as a success.

Arbaugh also takes Japanese, French lessons by controlling computer screen cursor with his brain

Arbaugh said he was released from the hospital a day after the device was implanted in his brain, and that he had no cognitive impairment as a result.

“There is a lot of work to be done, but it has already changed my life,” he said.

“I don’t want people to think this is the end of the journey.”

He told of starting out by thinking about moving the cursor and eventually the implant system mirrored his intent. “The reason I got into it was because I wanted to be part of something that I feel is going to change the world,” he added.

Arbaugh said he plans to dress up this Halloween as Marvel Comics X-Men character Charles Xavier, who is wheelchair-bound but possesses mental superpowers.

“I’m going to be Professor X,” he said. “I think that’s pretty fitting... I’m basically telekinetic.”

A Neuralink engineer in the video, which was posted on X (formerly Twitter) and Reddit, promised more updates regarding the patient’s progress.

“I knew they started doing this with human patients, but it’s another level to actually see the person who has one in,” one Reddit user commented. “Really crazy, impressive and scary all at once.”

Kip Ludwig, former program director for neural engineering at the US National Institutes of Health, said what Neuralink showed was not a “breakthrough”. “It is still in the very early days’ post-implantation, and there is a lot of learning on both the Neuralink side and the subject’s side to maximise the amount of information for control that can be achieved,” he added.

Even so, Ludwig said it was a positive development for the patient that they have been able to interface with a computer in a way they were not able to before the implant. “It’s certainly a good starting point,” he said.

Last month, Reuters reported that the US Food and Drug Administration inspectors found problems with record keeping and quality controls for animal experiments at Neuralink, less than a month after the startup said it was cleared to test its brain implants in humans. Neuralink did not respond then to questions about the FDA’s inspection.

Neuralink’s technology works through a device about the size of five stacked coins that is placed inside the human brain through invasive surgery.

The startup, cofounded by Musk in 2016, aims to build direct communication channels between the brain and computers.

The ambition is to supercharge human capabilities, treat neurological disorders like ALS or Parkinson’s, and maybe one day achieve a symbiotic relationship between humans and artificial intelligence.

Musk is hardly alone in trying to make advances in the field, which is officially known as brain-machine or brain-computer interface research.

Published in Dawn, March 22nd, 2024

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