AI and brain implant enables ALS patient to easily converse with family 'for 1st time in years'

A researcher describes the technology behind an AI-powered device that translates thoughts into words for people who cannot otherwise speak.

A man in a wheelchair with wires around his head sits facing a computer screen
Casey Harrell, who has ALS, works with a brain-computer interface to turn his thoughts into words.
(Image credit: Nicholas Card)

Brain-computer interfaces are a groundbreaking technology that can help paralyzed people regain functions they've lost, like moving a hand. These devices record signals from the brain and decipher the user's intended action, bypassing damaged or degraded nerves that would normally transmit those brain signals to control muscles.

Since 2006, demonstrations of brain-computer interfaces in humans have primarily focused on restoring arm and hand movements by enabling people to control computer cursors or robotic arms. Recently, researchers have begun developing speech brain-computer interfaces to restore communication for people who cannot speak.

Nicholas Card
Postdoctoral Fellow of Neuroscience and Neuroengineering, University of California, Davis

I'm a postdoc in the UC Davis Neuroprosthetics Lab and focus both on fundamental neuroscience and translational neuroengineering. In 2022 I completed my PhD training in the University of Pittsburgh's neural engineering program. My PhD research was centered around the development of imaging techniques for studying primate cortical connectivity in vivo at high resolution. My undergraduate research at Pitt Bioengineering was centered around brain-computer interfaces in behaving primates. I hold a A.P. Giannini Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowship and Leadership Award.