Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University develop a non-invasive brain-computer interface that helps people move objects with their thoughts.
An Indonesian man uses scrap metal to make his own rehabilitation arm.
Three Austrian men became the first in the world to be fitted with thought-controlled robotic arms, based on electronic restructuring technology.
The US Braingate team has introduced technology to interact between the brain and computer, allowing paralyzed people to control their limbs through thought.
British scientists are developing a chip
Mental Work science project uses the Brain and Machine Connection Interface (BMI), developed at the laboratory of the Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland.
Scientists have created a wheelchair that can only be controlled by thinking and they have implanted a control device into the monkey's brain to