DARPA's "Non-invasive" Stimulating Brain-Machine Interface Expands the use of Neurotechnology

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5 months ago
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DARPA's "Non-invasive" Stimulating BMI (Brain-Machine Interface) Will Expand the use of Neurotechnology.

Read what pioneers in the fields of BMI research, Jose M. Carmena and Jose del R. Millan, are saying about both noninvasive and invasive cortical signals and how it can be used to control robotic systems in a successful way.

Link to the report: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=5415990

Jose del R. Millan is a pioneer in development of noninvasive brain-controlled
robots and neuroprostheses as a Defitech Professor at the Center for
Neuroprosthetics of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Jose M. Carmena got his M.S. degree in artificial intelligence and the Ph.D. degree in
robotics from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, is a Senior Member of the IEEE Robotics and Automation (RA), Systems, Man, and Cybernetics (SMC), and Engineering and Medicine Biology (EMB) societies], Society for Neuroscience, and the Neural Control of Movement Society. His research interests
include systems neuroscience (neural basis of sensorimotor learning and control; neural ensemble computation) and neural engineering (BMIs; neuroprosthetics; and biomimetic robotics).

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Tags: DARPA, BMI, Brain-machine, Interface, Non-invasive, Invasive, Neurotechnology, Carmena, Millan, Neuroscience, Systems, Neural engineering, Biomimetic Robotics

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