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Elon Musk unveils ‘Fitbit in your skull’ brain chip, demonstrates on pig


AUSTIN (KXAN) — “It actually fits quite nicely under your skull. It could be under your hair and you wouldn’t know,” said Tesla CEO Elon Musk during a Friday webcast.

Elon Musk unveils NeuraLink’s latest prototype (NeuraLink)

It was at this webcast that Musk unveiled the latest version of his company NeuraLink’s latest prototype, the Link VO.9 — a chip that would allow humans to control devices with their brains.

Musk said this could eventually help cure people with conditions like memory loss, hearing loss, paralysis, blindness, brain damage, depression and anxiety.

Viewers of the webcast met Gertrude, a pig that had the chip implanted in her brain two months ago. A graph shown onscreen showed the waves inside Gertrude’s brain, which fired when her brain communicated with her snout while she was eating.

“This is a healthy, happy pig,” said Musk. “Indistinguishable from a normal pig.”

The chip can read signals from all of Gertrude’s limbs, Musk said.

NeuraLink previously unveiled a more complicated device that sat behind the ear which was visible from the outside.

The Link VO.9, Musk said, simplifies that device.

The coin-sized device would go into the skull and would actually replace a piece of skull. The scotch tape-looking flap (pictured below) is not part of the device, but is used to protect fine wires that would connect to the brain once implanted.

The Link VO.9 (NeuraLink)

“It’s a lot more complicated than this, but a simplified version is it’s kind of like a Fitbit in your brain with tiny wires,” Musk said.

Link VO.9 would be able to connect to and communicate with a person’s mobile phone.

The company is currently working toward human trials — which should be ready soon, pending required approvals, NeuraLink said. The FDA has also designated the prototype as a “Breakthrough Device” and Musk says the company is working closely with the association.

The CEO says the VO.9 is about 100 times better than the most similar device that’s currently available.

Getting a link put into your brain would involve an out-patient procedure done without general anesthesia — it would take less than an hour and would have to be performed by a robot.

“If the electrodes are inserted very carefully, there’s no bleeding,” he said.

Another pig, Dorothy, was shown during the presentation. This pig had a chip put in and then removed, which Musk said proves removal would allow a patient to still be healthy afterwards.

NeuraLink was founded by Musk in 2016 with the aim to explore and research connecting human brains to computer technology. In a 2019 Q&A, Musk said the device had been tested on monkeys and that the test subjects were able to control computers with their brains.

Readings of Gertrude the pig’s brainwaves, which are shown to have been predicted by the VO.9 chip (NeuraLink)

Current medical research, according to the Friday presentation, is currently cumbersome, requires medical expertise and involves skull protrusions — increasing risk of infection.

“It’s literally a bed of rigid spikes inserted with an air hammer,” Musk explained. “There’s wires and a box on your head. And it looks weird if you walk around with a box on your head.”

Despite the crude implementation, however, Musk says these procedures prove the technology is possible.

Currently available technology includes something called “Deep Brain Stimulation,” Musk says. These implants put a small amount of electrodes into your brain but they can’t read or write a large amount of information, he explained.

“It’s a bit like kicking the TV,” he said. “Which sometimes works. But not always.”

He says the tech has helped more than 150,000 people, however.

Despite his enthusiasm for the technology, Musk previously expressed his belief that artificial intelligence could wipe out the human race, saying: “Even in a benign AI scenario, we will be left behind.”

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