On March 29th, under the experiment of the Case Western Reserve University scholars and the Cleveland Functional Electrical Stimulation Center, a quadriplegic patient successfully controlled his hands through brain thinking and sent food into his mouth. The patient who participated in the experiment was named Bill Kochevar, 56 years old. He had a car accident while riding a bicycle, causing paralysis. Bill told Engadget reporter: "For a person who has been unable to move all over the body for eight years, even moving one inch is extremely lucky for me. The results of this experiment are much better than I expected!" Naturally, such a result is not achieved overnight. In fact, scientists have long tried to make this intracortical brain-computer interface (iBCI). Among them, Professor Leigh Hocherg (also the leader of this experiment), a neurobiological engineer at Brown University in the United States, achieved the most remarkable results. 瘫痪 patients control the screen cursor through brain thoughts As early as 2004, Leigh's BrainGate planned to put the brain-computer interface into the cerebral cortex of a 24-year-old quadriplegic to help the patient transmit brain information. Although the device is only the size of a tablet, the interior is very complicated and consists of 96 electrodes. In 2010, UCLA and Caltech scholars began helping patients use brain thinking to control the mouse cursor on the screen. The patient controls the robotic arm by thinking and picks up the coffee on the table. Tetanus Toxoid Vaccine,Toxoid Vaccine,Hep B Immune Globulin,Immunoglobulin Injections FOSHAN PHARMA CO., LTD. , https://www.full-pharma.com