Human experiments are testing an implant that restores the memory of patients with brain disease. This brain implanter is expected to be available in the next 10 years.
Researchers involved in investigating how brain memory work have successfully completed test experiments in mice and monkeys and entered the early stages of testing human volunteers. Patients with diseases such as epilepsy may benefit first, and eventually the implant will be used to treat Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.
This brain implanter further forms a "memory stream" by observing the memory formed by a certain part of the brain, and then simulates the hippocampus function to play a role in replicating memory. The device contains several sets of separate electrode sets, one of which is capable of recording memory and then sent to a computer for digital conversion to permanent memory; the other electrode group simulates the hippocampal tissue layer to produce the same memory content according to computer instructions. "There is not the ability to return personal memory to the brain, but to have the ability to restore brain memory," said Heyodor Berger, a professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Southern California.
Researchers involved in investigating how brain memory work have successfully completed test experiments in mice and monkeys and entered the early stages of testing human volunteers. Patients with diseases such as epilepsy may benefit first, and eventually the implant will be used to treat Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.
This brain implanter further forms a "memory stream" by observing the memory formed by a certain part of the brain, and then simulates the hippocampus function to play a role in replicating memory. The device contains several sets of separate electrode sets, one of which is capable of recording memory and then sent to a computer for digital conversion to permanent memory; the other electrode group simulates the hippocampal tissue layer to produce the same memory content according to computer instructions. "There is not the ability to return personal memory to the brain, but to have the ability to restore brain memory," said Heyodor Berger, a professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Southern California.
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