Japanese kirigami inspires flexible brain implants in China

Chinese scientists have drawn inspiration from the Japanese paper-cutting art of kirigami to develop stretchable microelectrode arrays, aiming to overcome limitations in electrode technology such as that used by Neuralink. These arrays were implanted into macaque monkeys, where they flexed with brain tissue to record hundreds of neurons simultaneously. The research was published in the February 5 issue of Nature Electronics.

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences have used principles from the Japanese art of kirigami, a form of paper-cutting, to create stretchable microelectrode arrays. This innovation seeks to address limitations in current electrode technologies, such as thread retraction issues seen in Neuralink.

The team wrote: “The development of brain-computer interfaces requires implantable microelectrode arrays that can interface with numerous neurons across large spatial and temporal scales.” When implanted into macaque monkeys, these soft arrays moved and flexed with the brain tissue, enabling the simultaneous recording of hundreds of neurons.

Brain-computer interfaces establish a direct connection between brain activity and computers. They use electrodes to capture neural signals, which are then analyzed to carry out tasks like controlling robotic arms. Key terms from the report include microelectrodes, Scientific American, Chinese Academy of Sciences, macaca monkey, Japanese art of kirigami, Chinese scientists, primate brain, brain-computer interfaces, Elon Musk, Nature Electronics, neuronal activity recorders, thread retraction, and Neuralink.

The study appeared in the February 5 issue of Nature Electronics, as reported by the South China Morning Post on February 14, 2026.

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Scientific illustration showing AI tool SIGNET mapping disrupted gene networks in Alzheimer's brain neurons.
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AI tool maps causal gene-control networks in Alzheimer’s brain cells

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Researchers at the University of California, Irvine report that a machine-learning system called SIGNET can infer cause-and-effect links between genes in human brain tissue, revealing extensive rewiring of gene regulation—especially in excitatory neurons—in Alzheimer’s disease.

Northwestern University researchers report they have printed flexible “artificial neurons” that generate realistic electrical spike patterns and can trigger responses in living mouse brain tissue. The team says the work, published April 15 in Nature Nanotechnology, could help advance brain-machine interfaces and more energy-efficient, brain-inspired computing.

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Three rhesus macaque monkeys equipped with brain-computer interfaces navigated virtual environments using only their thoughts. Researchers implanted around 300 electrodes in motor and premotor cortex areas to enable this control. The experiments aim to improve intuitive control for people with paralysis.

Researchers affiliated with MIT argue that transcranial focused ultrasound—a noninvasive technique that can modulate activity in deep brain regions—could enable more direct, cause-and-effect tests of how conscious experiences arise. In a “roadmap” review in *Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews*, they describe experimental approaches aimed at distinguishing between competing accounts of where and how awareness is generated in the brain.

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Epia Neuro, a newly launched startup in San Francisco, is developing a brain-computer interface to help stroke patients regain hand movement. The system combines a brain implant with a motorized glove. Stroke remains a leading cause of long-term disability, affecting hand and arm function in about two-thirds of survivors.

Doctors at Keck Medicine of USC are implanting lab-grown, dopamine-producing cells into the brains of people with Parkinson’s disease in an early-stage clinical trial that will enroll up to 12 participants across three U.S. sites.

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