The first ever chip implanted into a human brain by Elon Musk’s Neuralink company has malfunctioned, it has announced.
The leads connecting the device to the mind of Noland Arbaugh, a paraplegic, “retracted”, reducing the amount of data it could collect.
The device was implanted into the US patient, who was paralysed from the neck down in a diving accident, in January. The chip is about the size of a 50p piece, and sits in the top of Mr Arbaugh’s head, in a hole drilled into his skull.
It has 64 flexible “threads” that extend into the motor cortex of his brain, allowing him to control devices and play video games using his mind. The company announced on Wednesday that the device recently malfunctioned after some of the threads retracted from his brain, reducing the amount of data it could receive.
In a blog post on Wednesday, Neuralink said the failure in the threads resulted in “a net decrease in the number of effective electrodes” and that the device had been adjusted to make it more sensitive.
It said the changes had resulted in a “rapid and sustained improvement” in the number of data bits the device can transmit per second, and that it has “now superseded Noland’s initial performance”.
Mr Arbaugh is the first human patient to receive a brain implant, although the device has also been trialled by Neuralink on pigs, sheep and monkeys. In future, it could be used to allow many more paralysed patients to operate computers.
Mr Arbaugh previously used a tablet computer and stylus, which he held in his mouth. The stylus prevented him from talking and could cause sores. After trialling the device, he said he had been able to beat his friends at computer games – something he previously thought would be impossible.
“It’s like a luxury overload. I haven’t been able to do these things in eight years and now I don’t know where to even start allocating my attention,” he said.
On March 20, the company ran a live-streamed demonstration of Mr Arbaugh playing online chess. He is able to move the cursor of a computer by imagining where he would like it to go, he said.
Experts at Neuralink have explored the possibility that the malfunction was caused by a condition known as pneumocephalus, which involves trapped air in the brain potentially caused by the surgery used to implant the device into Mr Arbaugh’s skull.
It was reported in the Wall Street Journal that the company considered removing the device in a procedure known as “explantation”.
Neuralink, which was founded by Musk in 2016, has said it hopes to implant ten of the chips into patients this year.
The device has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, despite ethical objections from some experts and reports of animal cruelty at the company during its earlier trials.
The company admitted that some monkeys had died during the early tests, but denied accusations of cruelty.
It said it was “absolutely committed to working with animals in the most humane and ethical way possible”.
Source Agencies