This brain-computer interface lets paralysed people type faster than ever before

For several decades, medical researchers have been working on a way to turn brainwaves into instructions for an external device. These brain-computer interfaces, first developed in the 1970s, hold enormous promise – they could let paralysed people move again, and augment or even replace the way we interact with the world.

Unfortunately, existing brain-computer interfaces are slow and tricky to learn. But now a group from Stanford University has developed a new model designed for typing which outperforms every previous device to date.

Pill-sized

To use it, three volunteers suffering severe limb weakness disorders agreed to have a small pill-sized electrode array implanted in their brain. The array records signals from the motor cortex, which controls muscle movement, and uses an algorithm to translate them into instructions for the computer to move a cursor around an on-screen keyboard.

After a short training period, the participants were able to outperform all previous brain-computer interface tests on people with similarly impaired movement. One participant managed 39 correct characters per minute. It's believed that with the addition of automatic word correction software, this could be boosted even further.

"This study reports the highest speed and accuracy, by a factor of three, over what's been shown before," said Krishna Shenoy, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator who's been pursuing BCI development for 15 years. "We're approaching the speed at which you can type text on your cellphone."

No insurmountable challenges

The researchers believe that future versions of the device will be wireless, fully implanted, self-calibrating, and able to be used around the clock. "I don't see any insurmountable challenges." Shenoy said. "We know the steps we have to take to get there."

Dennis Degray, one of the study participants, added: "This is like one of the coolest video games I've ever gotten to play with. And I don't even have to put a quarter in it."

The full details of the system were published in the journal eLife.

Duncan Geere
Duncan Geere is TechRadar's science writer. Every day he finds the most interesting science news and explains why you should care. You can read more of his stories here, and you can find him on Twitter under the handle @duncangeere.
Latest in Tech
The best tech of MWC 2025 examples, including the Nothing Phone 3a Pro, the Nubia Flip 2, and the Lenovo Solar PC
Best of MWC 2025: the 10 top tech launches we tried on the show floor
Toy Fair 2025 Primal Hatch
The 7 best toys we saw at Toy Fair 2025, from a Lego boat to a hatching, robotic dinosaur
ICYMI
ICYMI: the 7 biggest tech stories of the week, from a next-gen Alexa to the new iPhone 16e
A triptych image featuring the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2, iPhone 16e and Amazon Echo Show 21.
5 hottest tech reviews of the week: the gorgeous, affordable iPhone 16e and Amazon's epic 21-inch Echo Show
Apple Airtag four pack on orange background with lowest price sign
The Apple AirTags are now even cheaper than Black Friday thanks to a surprise price cut at Amazon
Acer Predator Helios Neo 14 on purple background with big savings text overlay
Portable and powerful, the Acer Predator Helios Neo 14 gaming laptop with an RTX 4070 is $600 off right now
Latest in News
An Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070
Nvidia confirms that an RTX 5070 Founders Edition is coming... just not on launch day
Microsoft UK CEO Darren Hardman AI Tour London 2025
Microsoft - UK can help drive the global AI future, but only with the proper buy-in
Asus Prime OC RTX 5070 graphics card with three fans, shown at an angle
Asus reveals Nvidia RTX 5070 launch pricing, and while one model is at MSRP – thankfully – the others make me want to give up my search for a next-gen GPU
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman attends the artificial intelligence Revolution Forum. New York, US - 13 Jan 2023
Sam Altman tweets delay to ChatGPT-4.5 launch while also proposing a shocking new payment structure
Red padlock open on electric circuits network dark red background
AI-powered cyber threats are becoming the biggest worry for businesses everywhere
Philips Hue lights being dimmed
Got Philips Hue lights? A free app update delivers these 3 improvements