Neurotechnology

In a future with more ‘mind reading,’ thanks to neurotech, we may need to rethink freedom of thought

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, April 9, 2024

He warned that writing undermines memory – that it is nothing but a reminder of some previous thought.

Key Points: 
  • He warned that writing undermines memory – that it is nothing but a reminder of some previous thought.
  • Today, the U.S. is in the middle of a similar panic over TikTok, with critics worried about its impact on viewers’ freedom of thought.
  • Brain-computer interfaces, called BCIs, have rightfully prompted debate about the appropriate limits of technologies that interact with the nervous system.
  • But as my research on neurorights argues, protecting the mind isn’t nearly as easy as protecting bodies and property.

Thoughts vs. things

  • The body has clear boundaries, and things that cross it without permission are not allowed.
  • It is normally obvious when a person violates laws prohibiting assault or battery, for example.
  • The same is true about regulations that protect a person’s property.
  • Instead, a person’s thoughts are largely the product of other peoples’ thoughts and actions.
  • Everything from how a person perceives colors and shapes to our most basic beliefs are influenced by what others say and do.
  • If I’m not allowed to influence others’ thoughts, then I can never leave my house, because just by my doing so I’m causing people to think and act in certain ways.

Neurotech and control

  • People may not be able to completely control what gets into their heads, but they should have significant control over what goes out – and some people believe societies need “neurorights” regulations to ensure that.
  • Neurotech represents a new threat to our ability to control what thoughts people reveal to others.
  • There are ongoing efforts, for example, to develop wearable neurotech that would read and adjust the customer’s brainwaves to help them improve their mood or get better sleep.
  • For example, nations could prohibit companies that make commercial neurotech devices, like those meant to improve the wearer’s sleep from storing the brainwave data those devices collect.
  • Yet I would argue that it may not be necessary, or even feasible, to protect against neurotech putting information into our brains – though it is hard to predict what capabilities neurotech will have even a few years from now.
  • But one thing is certain: With or without neurotech, our control over our own minds is already less absolute than many of us like to think.


Parker Crutchfield does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Implantable Brain-Computer Interface Collaborative Community (iBCI-CC) to Drive Innovation in Neurotechnology

Retrieved on: 
Monday, March 11, 2024

Mass General Brigham is establishing the Implantable Brain-Computer Interface Collaborative Community (iBCI-CC).

Key Points: 
  • Mass General Brigham is establishing the Implantable Brain-Computer Interface Collaborative Community (iBCI-CC).
  • This is the first Collaborative Community in the clinical neurosciences that has participation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
  • BCIs are devices that interface with the nervous system and use software to interpret neural activity.
  • This collaborative effort aims to propel the field of iBCIs forward by employing harmonized approaches that drive continuous innovation and ensure equitable access to these transformative technologies.

The brain is the most complicated object in the universe. This is the story of scientists’ quest to decode it – and read people’s minds

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 7, 2024

This is the closest science has yet come to reading someone’s mind.

Key Points: 
  • This is the closest science has yet come to reading someone’s mind.
  • As Alexander Huth, the neuroscientist who co-led the research, told the New York Times:
    This isn’t just a language stimulus.
  • In the longer term, this could lead to wider public applications such as fitbit-style health monitors for the brain and brain-controlled smartphones.
  • On January 29, Elon Musk announced that his Neuralink tech startup had implanted a chip in a human brain for the first time.

Humanity’s greatest mapping challenge

  • By fully mapping the structure and function of a healthy human brain, we can determine with great precision what goes awry in diseases of the brain and mind.
  • Similar initiatives were launched in Europe in 2013 (the Human Brain Project) and China in 2016 (the China Brain Project).
  • This daunting endeavour may still take generations to complete – but the scientific ambition of mapping and reading people’s brains dates back more than two centuries.
  • With the world having been circumnavigated many times over, Antarctica discovered and much of the planet charted, humanity was ready for a new (and even more complicated) mapping challenge – the human brain.
  • In the 1860s, “locationist” views of how the brain worked made a comeback – though the scientists leading this research were keen to distinguish their theories from phrenology.
  • French anatomist Paul Broca discovered a region of the left hemisphere responsible for producing speech – thanks in part to his patient, Louis Victor Leborgne, who at age 30 lost the ability to say anything other than the syllable “tan”.
  • This approach depends on the findings of American physiologist John Fulton almost a century ago.
  • This stronger pulse of activity was not replicated by other sensory inputs, for example when smelling tobacco or vanilla.

The first clinical trial

  • The ultimate goal is wireless, non-invasive devices that help patients communicate and move with precision in the real world.
  • In 2004, BrainGate began the first clinical trial using BCIs to enable patients with impaired motor systems (including spinal cord injuries, brainstem infarctions, locked-in syndrome and muscular dystrophy) control a computer cursor with their thoughts.
  • The team is working with academics from different backgrounds who have been engaged in projects aimed at tackling societal and scientific challenges.
  • Patient MN, a quadriplegic since being stabbed in the neck in 2001, was the trial’s first patient.
  • In addition, brain activity was linked to the patient’s prosthetic hand and robotic arm, enabling rudimentary actions including grasping and transporting an object.
  • Also in 2017, BrainGate clinical trials reported the first evidence that BCIs could be used to help patients regain movement of their own limbs by bypassing the damaged portion of the spinal cord.

A new era of ‘mind reading’ technology

  • But having been primarily envisaged as a tool for diagnostics and monitoring, it is now also a core element of the latest neural communication and prosthetic devices.
  • Despite being behaviourally non-responsive and minimally conscious, these patients were able to answer yes-or-no questions just by using their minds.
  • Now, a decade on, the HuthLab research at the University of Texas constitutes a paradigmatic shift in the evolution of communication-enabling neuroimaging systems.
  • Whereas the brain’s capacity to produce motor intentions is shared across species, the ability to produce and perceive language is uniquely human.
  • The disadvantage of fMRI is that it can only take slow measurements of brain signals (typically, one brain volume every two or three seconds).
  • They demonstrated that the system could be used not only to decode semantic content entertained through auditive perception, but also through visual perception.
  • Importantly, they also explicitly addressed the potential threat to a person’s mental privacy posed by this kind of technology.
  • We take very seriously the concerns that it could be used for bad purposes and have worked to avoid that.

The ethical implications are immense

  • Losing the ability to communicate is a deep cut to one’s sense of self.
  • The ethical implications of providing access to such data to scientific and corporate entities are potentially immense.
  • For example, Parkinson’s disease, a neurodegenerative disease that affects movement, is co-morbid with dementia, which affects the ability to reason and think clearly.
  • In line with this approach, Chile was the first country that adopted legislation to address the risks inherent to neurotechnology.
  • One of the cornerstones of ethical research is the principle of informed consent.
  • The growing availability of neurotechnology in a commercial context that is generally subject to far less regulation only amplifies these ethical and legal concerns.
  • We are at an early stage of technological development and as we begin to uncover the great potential of BCI, both for therapeutic applications and beyond, the need to consider these ethical questions and their implications for legal action becomes more pressing.

Decoding our neuro future

  • By the middle of 2021, the total investment in neurotechnology companies amounted to just over US$33 billion (around £26 million).
  • The implant is said to include 1,024 electrodes, yet is only slightly larger than the diameter of a red blood cell.
  • The Kernel Flow, for example, is a commercially available, wearable headset that uses fNRIS technology to monitor brain activity.
  • The dawn of a new era of brain-computer interfaces should be treated with great care and great respect – in acknowledgement of its immense potential to both help, and harm, our future generations.


For you: more from our Insights series:
Unlocking new clues to how dementia and Alzheimer’s work in the brain – Uncharted Brain podcast series

Freedom of thought is being threatened by states, big tech and even ourselves. Here’s what we can do to protect it

OCD is so much more than handwashing or tidying. As a historian with the disorder, here’s what I’ve learned

Noise in the brain enables us to make extraordinary leaps of imagination. It could transform the power of computers too

To hear about new Insights articles, join the hundreds of thousands of people who value The Conversation’s evidence-based news. Subscribe to our newsletter.
Stephanie Sheir received funding from the EPSRC (grant number EP/V026518/1). Timo Istace receives funding from Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Vlaanderen. Nicholas J. Kelley does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Neurotech company Roga launches India's first wearable for mental health

Retrieved on: 
Friday, January 12, 2024

More information on GoRoga and the announcement can be found here: https://www.prnewswire.com/in/news-releases/globalspace-technologies-unv...

Key Points: 
  • MUMBAI, India, Jan. 12, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Neurotech wellness company Roga announced today that it has joined GlobalSpace Technologies Ltd. ("GlobalSpace") in launching India's first known neurotech wearable to provide mental health care.
  • The program, GoRoga, pairs together the stress-relieving wearable with a customized digital platform to facilitate patients' progress under the guidance of their medical provider.
  • The wearable device provides gentle, pulsed, peripheral nerve stimulation to reduce brain activity associated with stress, paired with an AI-generated relaxation guide.
  • Roga CEO Ami Lebendiker and GlobalSpace Technologies CEO Krishna Singh made the announcement.

Neurotech wellness company Roga partners with major Indian telehealth company

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, August 23, 2023

SAN DIEGO, Aug. 23, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Neurotech wellness company Roga announced today that it has partnered with GlobalSpace Technologies Ltd. ("GlobalSpace"), India's first telehealth company, with a $35 million contract. This signals the first major healthcare deal for Roga, as well as its official global expansion beyond the U.S.

Key Points: 
  • SAN DIEGO, Aug. 23, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Neurotech wellness company Roga announced today that it has partnered with GlobalSpace Technologies Ltd. ("GlobalSpace"), India's first telehealth company, with a $35 million contract.
  • This signals the first major healthcare deal for Roga, as well as its official global expansion beyond the U.S.
  • In addition, Roga also launched its D2C offering in late 2022; consumers in the U.S. can purchase a Roga device directly from the company and download the companion app on iPhones and Androids.
  • In partnering with GlobalSpace however, Roga is now making its foray into offering white-label services to healthcare companies worldwide to provide the Roga platform to patients directly.

Synaptive Medical Announces Timothy J. Scannell as New Chair of Board of Directors

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, August 10, 2023

TORONTO, Aug. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Synaptive Medical, a global medical device and technology company solving surgical, imaging and data challenges, is pleased to announce the appointment of Timothy J. Scannell as the new Chair of the Board of Directors, effective June 20, 2023.

Key Points: 
  • TORONTO, Aug. 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Synaptive Medical, a global medical device and technology company solving surgical, imaging and data challenges, is pleased to announce the appointment of Timothy J. Scannell as the new Chair of the Board of Directors, effective June 20, 2023.
  • Mr. Scannell joined Synaptive Medical's Board of Directors in August 2022, bringing a wealth of experience and expertise in the medical device industry.
  • In addition to his service on the Synaptive board, Mr. Scannell currently serves as a director on the boards of publicly held Insulet, Novocure, Renalytix and MoleKule.
  • "We are thrilled to welcome Tim Scannell as the Chair of our Board of Directors.

New neurotechnology is blurring the lines around mental privacy – but are new human rights the answer?

Retrieved on: 
Monday, August 7, 2023

Several companies are trying to develop brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs, in hopes of helping patients with severe paralysis or other neurological disorders.

Key Points: 
  • Several companies are trying to develop brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs, in hopes of helping patients with severe paralysis or other neurological disorders.
  • In July 2023, the U.N. agency for science and culture held a conference on the ethics of neurotechnology, calling for a framework to protect human rights.
  • Some critics have even argued that societies should recognize a new category of human rights, “neurorights.” In 2021, Chile became the first country whose constitution addresses concerns about neurotechnology.
  • However, I believe these debates can overlook more fundamental threats to privacy.

A glimpse inside

    • Researchers can make inferences about mental phenomena and interpret behavior based on this kind of information.
    • Data has already gone through filters and algorithms before the human eye gets the output.
    • It is also worth remembering that a key aspect of being human has always been inferring other people’s behaviors, thoughts and feelings.
    • Artificial intelligence could be used to combine that data into more powerful interpretations.

Think for yourself?

    • They argue that greater regulation of neurotechnology may be required to protect individuals’ freedom to determine their own inner thoughts and to control their own mental functions.
    • Yet I would argue that the way cognitive freedom is discussed in these debates sees each individual person as an isolated, independent agent, neglecting the relational aspects of who we are and how we think.
    • For example, part of my mental process as I write this article is recollecting and reflecting on research from colleagues.
    • Looking beyond novel technology to strengthen current privacy laws may give a more holistic view of the many threats to privacy, and what freedoms need defending.

Wyss Center Appoints Dr. Craig Cook as New Head of Business Development and Licensing

Retrieved on: 
Monday, July 10, 2023

The Wyss Center, a leading non-profit research center dedicated to innovating and accelerating technologies and therapies for neurological and mental health disorders, is pleased to announce the appointment of Craig Cook, MD, MBA, to the leadership team as Head of Business Development and Licensing.

Key Points: 
  • The Wyss Center, a leading non-profit research center dedicated to innovating and accelerating technologies and therapies for neurological and mental health disorders, is pleased to announce the appointment of Craig Cook, MD, MBA, to the leadership team as Head of Business Development and Licensing.
  • Dr. Cook brings more than 25 years of impressive executive leadership and entrepreneurial expertise in the fields of biotech, medtech and clinical medicine.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230710043091/en/
    “The addition of Craig to the Wyss Center team comes at a pivotal time,” said Erwin Bottinger, MD, CEO of the Wyss Center, “Craig brings a wealth of experience in translating medical technologies and therapies into clinical impact.
  • Dr. Cook's extensive track record complements the Wyss Center's commitment to neurological and mental health, strengthening its science and technology portfolio.

How uploading our minds to a computer might become possible

Retrieved on: 
Monday, June 26, 2023

Recent television series such as Black Mirror and Upload, as well as some games, demonstrate our continued fascination with this idea.

Key Points: 
  • Recent television series such as Black Mirror and Upload, as well as some games, demonstrate our continued fascination with this idea.
  • Recent developments in science and technology are taking us closer to a time when mind uploading could graduate from science fiction to reality.
  • Detailed scans of the brain and its activity would allow us to reproduce a person’s biological brain, and potentially mind, in a computer.

Several approaches

    • This would gather the data needed to produce a working copy of a brain.
    • So, how likely is it that whole brain emulation, and potentially mind uploading, will be achieved?
    • Our minds, and particularly consciousness, are often considered something greater and more ephemeral than a function of the biological brain.

Modifying the brain

    • Such developments, along with advances in artificial intelligence (AI), are allowing us to better decipher brain waves.
    • In the future, they may well allow us to “write to” or modify the brain.
    • No one knows for certain how long it might take to emulate the human brain.

ICO warns of “real danger” of discrimination in new technologies that monitor the brain

Retrieved on: 
Monday, June 19, 2023

The regulator predicts that the use of technology to monitor neurodata, the information coming directly from the brain and nervous system, will become widespread over the next decade.

Key Points: 
  • The regulator predicts that the use of technology to monitor neurodata, the information coming directly from the brain and nervous system, will become widespread over the next decade.
  • It can predict, diagnose, and treat complex physical and mental illnesses, transforming a person’s responses to illnesses such as dementia and Parkinson’s disease.
  • Neurodivergent people may be particularly at risk of discrimination from inaccurate systems and databases that have been trained on neuronormative patterns.
  • - To report a concern to the ICO telephone our helpline 0303 123 1113 or go to ico.org.uk/concerns.