뇌 이식으로 마비된 사람들이 거의 스마트폰 사용자만큼 빠르게 타자를 칠 수 있게 되었습니다
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#기술 리뷰
#뇌 이식
#마비
#신경 인터페이스
#탑자 속도
원문 출처: Singularity Hub · Genesis Park에서 요약 및 분석
요약
매사추세츠 종합병원 연구진이 사지 마비 환자 두 명을 대상으로 뇌 시그널을 디지털 키보드 입력으로 변환하는 뇌 임플란트 시스템을 개발해 분당 22단어의 타이핑 속도를 달성했습니다. 참가자들은 손가락 움직임을 상상하는 것만으로 텍스트를 입력했으며, 이 속도는 일반 스마트폰 사용자의 수준과 거의 유사하여 기존 뇌 임플란트 기술 중 가장 빠른 것으로 기록되었습니다. 연구진은 표준 QWERTY 자판을 사용함으로써 사용자에게 더 직관적인 타이핑 경험을 제공하고, 눈의 피로를 줄이며 사고의 유출을 방지할 수 있다고 밝혔습니다. 이번 성과는 BrainGate2 임상 시험의 일환으로 신경 신호를 해석하여 마비 환자의 의사소통 능력을 획기적으로 회복시킨 것입니다.
본문
Brain Implants Let Paralyzed People Type Nearly as Fast as Smartphone Users As they imagine typing, implants translate brain signals into keystrokes on a standard digital keyboard. Image Credit BrainGate, Leigh Hochberg, Daniel Rubin and Justin Jude via YouTube Share It’s hard to picture a keyboard layout other than the one we know best. From laptops to smartphones, it’s an integral part of our digital lives. Scientists at Massachusetts General Hospital have now restored the ability to communicate by keyboard to two people with paralysis—using their thoughts alone. Both people already had brain implants that could record their minds’ electrical chatter. The new system translated brain signals in real time as each person imagined finger movements. The system then accurately predicted the character they were trying to type. The system learned to translate brain activity to physical intent after just 30 sentences. Typing speeds reached 22 words per minute with few errors, nearly matching speeds of able-bodied smartphone users. “To our knowledge, this system provides the fastest… [brain implant] communication method reported to date based on decoding from hand motor cortex,” wrote the team. The participants are part of the BrainGate2 clinical trial, a pioneering effort to restore communication and movement by decoding neural signals in people who have lost the use of all four limbs and the torso. One of the participants previously used the implants to translate his inner thoughts into text, but with mixed success. Controlling a digital keyboard is far more intuitive and familiar, which makes it easier to grasp. Once a person learns to use the system, they don’t have to look at the keyboard, giving their eyes a break as they type with their minds. It also allows users full control of when, or when not, to share their thoughts, preventing accidental leakage of private musings onto a screen or broadcasted with AI-generated speech. All Hands on Deck Parts of the brain hum with electrical activity before we speak. Over the past decade, brain implants—microelectrodes that listen in and decode signals—have translated these seemingly chaotic buzzes into text or speech, allowing paralyzed people to regain the ability to communicate. Methods vary. Some hardware takes the form of wafer-thin disks sitting on top of the brain and gathering signals from vast regions; other devices are inserted into the brain for more targeted recordings. These systems are life changing. In a recent example, an implant translated the neural activity controlling a man with ALS’s vocal muscles. With just a second’s delay, the system generated coherent sentences with intonation, allowing him to sing with an artificial voice. Another device turned a paralyzed woman’s thoughts into speech with nearly no delay, so she could hold a conversation without frustrating halts. People have also benefited from a method that uses the neural signals behind handwriting for brain-to-text communication. Brain implants aren’t purely experimental anymore: China recently approved a setup allowing people with paralysis to control a robotic hand. It’s the first such device available outside of clinical trials. Perhaps the most widely used clinical solution is eye-tracking. Here, patients move their eyes to focus on individual letters, one at a time, on a custom digital keyboard. But the pace is agonizingly slow and prone to error. And prolonged screen time strains the eyes, making extended conversations difficult. “Those systems take far too long for many users,” said study author Daniel Rubin in a press release, causing them to abandon the technology. Tapping Away For people who already know how to type, the standard keyboard layout—known as QWERTY—feels familiar and comfortable. Fingers stretch to hit letters in the upper row, tap directly down for ones in the middle, and curl into a loose claw to hit bottom letters and punctuation. Be Part of the Future Sign up to receive top stories about groundbreaking technologies and visionary thinkers from SingularityHub. As fingers dance across the keyboard, parts of the motor cortex that control their motion spark with activity, precisely directing each placement. Mind-typing using a familiar keyboard, compared to a custom one, could feel more intuitive and relaxing. Two people with tetraplegia gave the idea a shot. Participant T17 was diagnosed with ALS at 30, a disease that slowly destroys motor neurons, weakening muscles and eventually impairing breathing. Three years later, when he enrolled in the study, he’d lost control of his vocal muscles and relied on a ventilator. He could move only his eyes, but his mind was still sharp. The second participant, T18, was paralyzed by a spinal cord injury 18 months before enrollment. Both had multiple brain implants in different areas. These were connected to cables that shuttled recordings to a computer system for real-time processing. The participants used a simplified QWERTY dig
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