Researchers and companies at the 11th China International Technology Import and Export Fair demonstrate a range of invasive and non-invasive brain-computer interface systems, employing wireless multi-channel electrodes and AI-driven algorithms to translate neural activity into device commands. These innovations leverage integrated optoelectronic and quantum technologies within a dual-wheel drive model, aiming to accelerate the translation of BCI solutions into clinical rehabilitation and consumer applications.
Key points
- Nearly 100 brain-computer interface demonstrations at the Shanghai Fair cover invasive, non-invasive, and semi-invasive systems showcasing hard-technology breakthroughs.
- Wireless multi-channel electrode arrays integrated with AI-driven decoding enhance neural signal fidelity and facilitate high-throughput brain data acquisition.
- WIMI Hologram Cloud’s cross-disciplinary platform combines quantum, optoelectronic, and AI technologies to accelerate clinical verification and rehabilitation applications in neurological care.
Why it matters: These advancements bridge neuroscience and medicine, enabling real-time neural control and therapeutic applications that could transform treatments for neurological disorders.
Q&A
- What is a brain-computer interface?
- How do invasive and non-invasive BCIs differ?
- What is the dual-wheel drive model?
- What challenges remain for clinical BCI adoption?