Chinese patients control devices with thoughts via BMI

Two Chinese patients with high-level paralysis have successfully used brain-machine interface (BMI) technology to control a power wheelchair, direct a robotic dog to retrieve deliveries, and operate a robotic arm to grasp a cup and drink water using only their thoughts. The achievements were announced on Wednesday at a media briefing by the Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai. This marks a major advancement toward practical clinical applications of BMI.

Breakthrough Background

Two Chinese patients in their 30s with high-level paralysis received BMI system implants developed jointly by the Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology (CEBSIT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a corporate partner in June and October, respectively. One patient suffered a spinal cord injury from a fall in 2022, resulting in paralysis below the neck. After the June implant and two weeks of training, he could control computer cursors and tablets with thoughts. The team then expanded to physical interactions, including driving a power wheelchair in the neighborhood and directing a robotic dog to fetch deliveries.

Technological Innovations

This marks the first time globally that a power wheelchair and robotic dog have been controlled solely through thoughts. The team achieved breakthroughs like high-fidelity neural data compression, a hybrid decoding model for extracting signals in noisy environments, and neural manifold alignment for cross-day stability. End-to-end delay from signal acquisition to device execution was reduced to under 100 milliseconds—faster than natural neural delays—for seamless control. Implants were inserted via a 5-millimeter cranial puncture, the smallest reported worldwide, and the device is about half the size of Neuralink's.

Patient Impact and Applications

One patient now works as an intern product sorter, using brain control for online data annotation to verify AI accuracy in vending machines. He described the experience as intuitive, like controlling a video game character without conscious joystick thought. The other used a cost-effective robotic arm to grasp a cup and drink water. Compared to the March first case of cursor control for games, these enable three-dimensional physical interaction, previously unattainable self-care, employment, and social participation.

"Our research is advancing BMI technology toward practical clinical applications," said Zhao Zhengtuo, lead scientist from CEBSIT, Shanghai Huashan Hospital, and an industry partner. "With an open mindset, we are collaborating with various smart devices and application platforms to jointly promote cutting-edge BMI innovation in our country."

Poo Muming, CAS academician and CEBSIT director, noted all three trial patients are healthy post rigorous reviews. Future goals include finer control like mind-controlled piano playing.

The team anticipates restoring motor and language functions in three years, sensory restoration and neuropsychiatric treatments like Parkinson's and depression in five, and highly minimally invasive systems for medical and consumer uses in a decade. Zhao hopes procedures become as simple as ear piercings, with costs affordable like electronic products.

Unlike Elon Musk's Neuralink, which had an early start, China leverages a more integrated ecosystem for neurotechnology, low-latency communication, AI decoding, and robotics synergy.

Related Articles

Illustration of Northwestern University's wireless micro-LED brain implant delivering light patterns to mouse neurons for sensory signaling.
Image generated by AI

Northwestern team develops wireless implant that ‘speaks’ to the brain with light

Reported by AI Image generated by AI Fact checked

Scientists at Northwestern University have created a soft, wireless brain implant that delivers patterned light directly to neurons, enabling mice to interpret these signals as meaningful cues without relying on sight, sound or touch. The fully implantable device uses an array of up to 64 micro-LEDs to generate complex activity patterns across the cortex, a development that could advance next-generation prosthetics and sensory therapies, according to Northwestern and Nature Neuroscience.

Gestala, a new entrant in China's expanding brain-computer interface sector, aims to connect with the brain using ultrasound technology without needing implants. This approach highlights the industry's shift toward less invasive methods. The company emerges amid rapid growth in Chinese biotech innovation.

Reported by AI Fact checked

Researchers have developed a paper-thin brain implant called BISC that creates a high-bandwidth wireless link between the brain and computers. The single-chip device, which can slide into the narrow space between the brain and skull, could open new possibilities for treating conditions such as epilepsy, paralysis, and blindness by supporting advanced AI models that decode movement, perception, and intent.

US-based Insilico Medicine, backed by Fosun and Tencent, is expanding its research base in China to develop an AI-powered drug-discovery tool called Pharma.AI. Founder Alex Zhavoronkov likened the tool to an “Einstein” capable of advancing drug discovery into new frontiers.

Reported by AI

In 2025, artificial intelligence is quietly transforming daily life in China, from smart homes to wearable devices and voice shopping. Executives from JD.com and Alibaba highlight surging consumer demand, with AI features now essential for many products. Experts view this as smart living moving from concept to mainstream adoption.

A team led by Nobel laureate Ardem Patapoutian at Scripps Research, working with collaborators at the Allen Institute, has secured a five-year, $14.2 million NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award to build what they describe as the first atlas of interoception—the internal sensory system that helps keep breathing, blood pressure and digestion in balance. ([eurekalert.org](https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1101449?utm_source=openai))

Reported by AI

A Chinese army drone equipped with a standard infantry assault rifle achieved a 100% hit rate in flight trials against a human-sized target at 100 meters. The system, hovering at 10 meters, fired 20 single rounds, all striking a standard 50cm by 50cm chest board.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline