This tech just let a paralyzed man move his fingers again

A brain implant just gave a paralyzed man control of his fingers

A brain implant has restored new functionality in a paralyzed man, restoring partial use of his hand and putting researchers one step forward in potentially one day curing paralysis.

Ian Burkhart regained the dexterity needed to pour a bottle, swipe a credit card, and play a simplified Guitar Hero-style rhythm game using his previously immobilized hand – all firsts for the 24-year-old since a spinal cord injury rendered him quadriplegic six years ago.

A breakthrough, but no cure

While this is certainly a breakthrough in its own right, the cure for paralysis has many more hurdles still ahead.

For starters, the tech that enables Burkhart to grasp objects once more is cumbersome to implement – the signals received from the host have to run through an external computer, ruling out any portable use for the time being.

On top of that, the implant sports less than 100 electrodes to coordinate muscles contractions, meaning that certain actions – like typing or playing more complex chords in Guitar Hero, let alone on a real guitar – would require far more precise equipment.

The researchers told The Verge they want to increase the electrode count to "a couple thousand" as they continue to improve upon the tech and march just a few steps closer to the team's ultimate goal of restoring mobility to the immobile, and giving hope to those afflicted by paralysis.

Top image credit: Nature

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Parker Wilhelm is a freelance writer for TechRadar. He likes to tinker in Photoshop and talk people's ears off about Persona 4.