Neuralink streams video of man playing chess with his mind

The young American startup Neuralink, owned by billionaire Elon Musk, released a video on Wednesday in which a patient plays chess by thought on his computer using a brain implant.

Noland Arbaugh, 29, quadriplegic since a diving accident, described playing chess and video games Civilization or even take Japanese and French lessons thanks to a brain implant that allows him, alone, to control a computer mouse.

“It’s crazy”, “it’s so cool”, said the young man, all smiles, in a video broadcast live by the company on the social networks X and Reddit.

“There’s still a lot to do, but it’s already changed my life,” he said, joking about becoming “telekinetic.”

During an exchange with a company engineer, the patient recounted how this new technology gave him simplified access to many of his hobbies. He also described the way in which he manages to move the cursor on the screen, the implant translating his intention.

The Neuralink engineer promised to keep Internet users informed of the patient’s progress.

The boss of Tesla and SpaceX and owner of X announced in January that Neuralink had placed its first brain implant on a patient as part of clinical trials.

He then assured at the end of February that this patient was now capable of controlling a computer mouse by thought.

“The reason I joined this project is because I wanted to be part of something that I think is going to change the world,” Arbaugh said Wednesday.

Neuralink, headquartered in Fremont, California, obtained the green light from the US Drug and Medical Devices Regulatory Agency (FDA) in May.

Its implant, the size of a coin, has already been placed in the brain of a macaque, which then managed to play a video game without a controller or keyboard.

Elon Musk aims to offer his implant to everyone, in order to enable better communication with computers and to contain, according to him, the “risk for our civilization” that artificial intelligence represents.

Neuralink recently raised some $323 million from investors and says it wants to make paralyzed patients walk again, restore sight to the blind or even cure people suffering from psychiatric illnesses such as depression.

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