Berliner Boersenzeitung - ALS patient pioneering brain-computer connection

EUR -
AED 4.229626
AFN 72.557604
ALL 96.200283
AMD 434.304194
ANG 2.061644
AOA 1056.111273
ARS 1608.366971
AUD 1.624462
AWG 2.075944
AZN 1.961012
BAM 1.959872
BBD 2.316914
BDT 141.153259
BGN 1.968616
BHD 0.434975
BIF 3415.570318
BMD 1.151703
BND 1.471489
BOB 7.977574
BRL 6.023521
BSD 1.150395
BTN 106.10737
BWP 15.685657
BYN 3.42682
BYR 22573.37436
BZD 2.313607
CAD 1.577706
CDF 2608.606438
CHF 0.906401
CLF 0.026516
CLP 1047.036065
CNY 8.011532
CNH 7.927786
COP 4266.390788
CRC 540.339027
CUC 1.151703
CUP 30.520123
CVE 110.495044
CZK 24.447537
DJF 204.846478
DKK 7.472351
DOP 70.218019
DZD 152.293142
EGP 60.314344
ERN 17.275542
ETB 181.205966
FJD 2.548085
FKP 0.865883
GBP 0.864249
GEL 3.132339
GGP 0.865883
GHS 12.521068
GIP 0.865883
GMD 84.64982
GNF 10085.259587
GTQ 8.817357
GYD 240.800286
HKD 9.024915
HNL 30.45433
HRK 7.536975
HTG 150.776526
HUF 390.904627
IDR 19546.066035
ILS 3.578709
IMP 0.865883
INR 106.404091
IQD 1506.930794
IRR 1521456.949262
ISK 143.444364
JEP 0.865883
JMD 180.956741
JOD 0.816554
JPY 183.182895
KES 149.25565
KGS 100.716474
KHR 4612.683422
KMF 494.080561
KPW 1036.583062
KRW 1717.137006
KWD 0.353285
KYD 0.958592
KZT 555.504113
LAK 24686.288142
LBP 103012.919266
LKR 358.214225
LRD 210.506434
LSL 19.352807
LTL 3.400679
LVL 0.696653
LYD 7.373351
MAD 10.807353
MDL 20.015584
MGA 4788.970338
MKD 61.646389
MMK 2418.752297
MNT 4116.758787
MOP 9.277475
MRU 45.865285
MUR 53.692156
MVR 17.805285
MWK 1994.352117
MXN 20.347536
MYR 4.512364
MZN 73.59289
NAD 19.352807
NGN 1574.711229
NIO 42.33015
NOK 11.076035
NPR 169.776624
NZD 1.970322
OMR 0.442828
PAB 1.15039
PEN 3.97095
PGK 4.960413
PHP 68.687266
PKR 321.348828
PLN 4.260298
PYG 7466.7073
QAR 4.204854
RON 5.092139
RSD 117.408061
RUB 94.300137
RWF 1678.895356
SAR 4.324546
SBD 9.273119
SCR 15.398642
SDG 692.173095
SEK 10.712771
SGD 1.471444
SHP 0.864075
SLE 28.332368
SLL 24150.643776
SOS 656.266306
SRD 43.271205
STD 23837.922132
STN 24.551755
SVC 10.065913
SYP 127.696075
SZL 19.338261
THB 37.263379
TJS 11.043195
TMT 4.036718
TND 3.397774
TOP 2.773023
TRY 50.912745
TTD 7.801208
TWD 36.762926
TZS 3005.944222
UAH 50.714084
UGX 4343.023049
USD 1.151703
UYU 46.76696
UZS 13908.897074
VES 513.943044
VND 30289.782943
VUV 137.728848
WST 3.172031
XAF 657.325511
XAG 0.014343
XAU 0.00023
XCD 3.112535
XCG 2.073207
XDR 0.817502
XOF 657.325511
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.684228
ZAR 19.245057
ZMK 10366.706959
ZMW 22.402543
ZWL 370.847823
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    16.78

    +2.26%

  • RELX

    0.1700

    34.64

    +0.49%

  • NGG

    0.4150

    91.305

    +0.45%

  • BTI

    0.1100

    61.05

    +0.18%

  • CMSC

    0.0710

    23.061

    +0.31%

  • GSK

    0.1800

    53.95

    +0.33%

  • BCE

    0.3610

    26.261

    +1.37%

  • AZN

    1.0500

    193.06

    +0.54%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    14.79

    +1.28%

  • BCC

    1.3900

    73.11

    +1.9%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    90.99

    +1.24%

  • BP

    1.2800

    44.18

    +2.9%

  • CMSD

    0.0350

    22.985

    +0.15%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.59

    +0.4%

ALS patient pioneering brain-computer connection
ALS patient pioneering brain-computer connection / Photo: William WEST - AFP

ALS patient pioneering brain-computer connection

As a rare form of Lou Gehrig's disease paralyses his body, Rodney Gorham hopes a pioneering link between his brain and a computer will help others after he is gone.

Text size:

The 63-year-old Australian shared his thoughts by using his eyes to pinpoint letters on a screen and "clicking" on words with his mind.

Thanks to an eight-millimetre stent implanted in his brain to detect neural activity, Gorham hopes to continue going online, sending messages and playing video games for a long time to come.

US company Synchron has been testing the "stentrode" for the past two years, getting cleared for human trials before Elon Musk's attention-grabbing Neuralink startup.

Gorham's implant connects to a small receiver and transmitter unit under the skin in his chest, and he credits it with changing his life.

Several years ago, Gorham was diagnosed with ALS, which causes progressive paralysis of the respiratory muscles, trunk, arms and legs.

The disorder is expected to gradually disable his movement, but not to kill him, according to his wife, Carolyn.

"So he could live for another 20 years. So think about if your body didn't move at all, your brain still firing at the same rate," she said.

"And you can't scratch your nose. You can't tell somebody you want to scratch your nose."

The brain implant gives her husband a "slice of life", letting him at least communicate or play a game, Carolyn Gorham added.

Rodney Gorham has given up on video games that require quick reactions typically made with handheld controllers or a computer mouse, but is still playing turn-based ones such as city-building games, according to his wife.

Without the experimental technology, the life of the sports car- and travel-loving former salesman "would be pure torture", Carolyn Gorham said.

- Language of the mind -

Synchron hopes to get approval next year from health authorities to market a final version of the device.

The startup said clinical tests have been conclusive but there is still a lot of work to do, notably in decoding brain signals and translating them into a universal language to command computers.

While eye-tracking tech enables a patient to target icons on a computer screen, the user must think of a motion -- like kicking their foot or making a fist -- to "click" an icon.

The software must be trained to recognise the brain signal that sends the command to the body, but people's minds "speak" in different ways.

Computers need a common neural language to understand the intent no matter who is thinking it, Synchron founder Tom Oxley said from his office in New York.

"That's a very interesting challenge we are facing now," Oxley told AFP.

"Building a system that is not just for one person, but for millions of people."

At his home in Melbourne, Rodney Gorham tells an AFP journalist that he was able to quickly learn to type using his mind.

While going through exercises to tune the software, he moves his feet as instructed. His hand moves an imaginary computer mouse on a tabletop.

At the start of the trial it took about two and a half seconds for Gorham's thoughts to prompt an on-screen click, but now it's a half second, Synchron engineer Zafar Faraz recalled while sitting next to the patient.

- Independence -

Gorham's contribution to improving the brain-computing interface has been "monumental", according to Faraz.

"I don't think we would be anywhere if he hadn't taken the brave step of volunteering and pioneering this technology," Faraz said.

Families of patients testing brain implants proudly compare them to astronauts bravely exploring a new world, said David Putrino, who oversees the stentrode's clinical testing in the United States and is director of rehabilitation innovation at New York's Mount Sinai Health System.

"We select patients who hope to advance science for others more than for themselves," Putrino told AFP.

The doctor sees implants like stentrodes improving overall health of patients whose conditions drastically limit social interaction, leaving them isolated.

"Recent studies show that solitude has the same effect on health as smoking 17 cigarettes a day," Putrino said.

The technology remains far from enabling real conversations, but it gives her husband much-needed autonomy, Carolyn Gorham said.

"Without the software... his life would be torture. I think that's the only way to describe it. It would be hell on earth.

"With this software the freedom that it will give him, just to be able to make decisions and look at things without asking somebody to do it for them. Just that little bit of independence is incredible."

(U.Gruber--BBZ)