A Brain Implant That Turns Your Thoughts Into Text | Tom Oxley | TED

193,377 views ・ 2022-06-02

TED


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A few months ago,
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I surrendered the password to my Twitter account
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to let a person with paralysis tweet out their thoughts.
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But I mean that literally.
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Philip O'Keefe can't use his fingers to type like you or I,
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but thanks to a tiny brain implant,
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he was able to send the following tweets.
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"Hello world! Short tweet. Monumental progress."
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"No need for keystrokes or voices.
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I created this tweet just by thinking it."
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"My hope is that I pave the way
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for people to be able to tweet through thoughts. Phil."
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Now you might be thinking there are some people out there
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who should not be allowed to tweet directly from their brain.
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(Laughter)
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I agree.
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But for people with paralysis and disability,
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this technology can be life-changing.
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I’m very excited to introduce you to Philip and Rodney.
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They both have a neurodegenerative disease called ALS,
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means they can't move their hands or speak clearly,
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but they can now text
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thanks to a brain-computer interface or BCI.
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There were Philip’s brain signals up on the screen.
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They’re connected to their computers via Bluetooth.
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The device is fully internalized, invisible to the outside world,
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and they learn to control the keyboard
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with clicks directly coming from their brain.
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Now BCIs conjure up images of science fiction like "The Matrix"
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with a cable jacked up into your brain through a hole in your skull.
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But I'm here to show you that the future can be much more elegant than that.
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So we got this group chat going,
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which I thought was a great idea,
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until they started roasting me about the TED Talk --
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(Laughter)
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Which they found hilarious.
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Thanks for the vote of confidence, guys,
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bloody Australians.
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(Laughter)
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Now you can see it's still quite slow for them to type this way,
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but this is like dial up speeds at the beginning of the Internet.
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This is a new Moore's Law.
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We're just getting started.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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That's Philip.
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This has been the dream of patients and caregivers,
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doctors and scientists, for decades,
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and for good reason.
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You may know someone who's lost the ability to use their hands,
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maybe from a stroke or a spinal cord injury
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or multiple sclerosis, paralysis.
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It comes in all shapes and sizes,
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from minor inconvenience to life-threatening.
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During my neurology residency, I cared for a man in his 40s.
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He had a stroke and developed locked-in syndrome.
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Meant he couldn't move his body, except for his eyes, left or right.
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His brain still worked like yours.
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He could see and hear and think and feel just like normal,
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but he couldn't move or speak ever again.
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And in what were horrific circumstances,
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we supported his wish to be taken off life support.
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And so I've been wondering ever since,
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was there not anything else that could have been done?
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Connection is a fundamental human need.
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So many of our patients have lost the ability to speak,
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let alone type, for years,
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and they so desperately want to reconnect with their family,
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with their loved ones.
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You know what the main request we get is?
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Text messaging.
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And then email.
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Control over their smartphone.
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And shock horror,
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social media.
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We've been speaking so much lately about the flaws of these technologies,
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but for people with paralysis, this is a return to life.
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BCIs make all of this possible.
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Now, part of the problem has been
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that BCIs typically require invasive surgery.
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This is the Utah Array.
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This is designed similarly to all other BCIs
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currently under development,
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which require drilling needles directly into the brain.
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Now, this has been the basis of critical fundamental research
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over the last 20 years
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and the early proof that this technology really can perform.
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But for patients, it means open-brain surgery,
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which involves cutting through the skull with a saw.
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And there are only about 150 functional neurosurgeons in the US
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that can perform this procedure.
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Apart from the fact that the recovery is tricky,
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the brain doesn't really like having needles put into it.
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It develops this foreign-body tissue rejection immune reaction over time.
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So I've been wondering, is there any other way into the brain?
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And there is, a secret back door.
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The blood vessels are the natural highways into the brain.
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These are hollow tubes that connect every corner of the brain.
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The largest vein at the top there is right next to the motor cortex.
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The exact part of the brain that we want to connect to
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to restore control to the outside world.
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How cool is that?
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Now we already know how to travel through the blood vessels.
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We've been doing it for 40 years, mostly going to the heart.
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If anyone here today has had a heart attack,
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there's a pretty good chance you've had a stent.
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A stent is a metal scaffold delivered through a catheter,
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which opens up like a flower into the blood vessel.
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Millions of stents are delivered each year,
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not in the OR,
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but in the cath lab or catheter laboratory.
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It's now common in the cath lab to navigate up into the brain
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through the blood vessels.
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And there are 2,500 physicians
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who can now navigate their way up into the brain.
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But what's really amazing about this
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is that for BCIs we already know
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that devices can be left inside a blood vessel,
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cells grow over it, incorporate it into the wall
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like a tattoo under the skin,
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and we're protected from that immune reaction.
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This is part of the reason why our team became the first in the world
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to receive a green light from the FDA to conduct clinical trials
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of a permanently implanted BCI.
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(Applause)
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So what we had to do was figure out a way to put a sensor,
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connected to this crosslinks of the stent
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that could record that brain activity.
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To do that, we had to do a complete overhaul of stent manufacturing.
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This is the end result.
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I think it's very beautiful.
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Then connect it to a cable
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which brings the information out of the brain
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and do it all in a way that it can be delivered in the cath lab.
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This way we can make BCI accessible not to the thousands of people,
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but to the millions of people who need this technology.
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So it wasn't easy, took us ten years,
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but I'm very excited to show you guys.
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We called this the Stentrode.
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(Applause)
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Graham Felstead, an incredible human being suffering with ALS,
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became the first person in the world
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to receive and use one of these brain-computer interfaces.
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And he has very generously offered you, the world,
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a chance to see what it looks like inside his brain.
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Would you like to see?
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Audience: Yes!
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TO: Seeing this video for the first time
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was one of the most incredible moments of my life.
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I was standing in the cath lab,
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Dr. Peter Mitchell had just completed the surgery
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and you can see the device, the outline of device,
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sitting inside the blood vessel there.
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So this popped up on the screen
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and it just felt like we were witnessing something new in the world.
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I had tingles down my spine,
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I've got them now thinking about it again.
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I turned to my colleague Pete,
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and I said something poetic and profound like,
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"Pete, holy shit!"
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(Laughter)
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And then two hours later, something even more amazing happened.
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Graham woke up, and he asked, “Am I alive?”
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And our nurse Kristine broke out in tears of relief.
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It was a phenomenal moment.
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Once it's in place,
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it's connected to this tiny antenna that sits under the skin in the chest.
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This collects the raw brain data
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and sends it out of the body wirelessly
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to then connect with external devices.
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It's always on and ready to go.
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Kind of like how your brain is meant to work.
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So here's how it works.
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Our engineers work with our patients to decode specific movements.
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So we tell the patient, “Press down your foot.”
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So they'll repeatedly press down their foot.
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You won't see the foot moving because they're paralyzed,
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but we've been able to determine
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which brain signals are generally linked to “Press down your foot.”
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The black dotted line is the moment of pressing down the foot,
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and you can see the brain signal is different before to after,
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which means we can turn that into a switch.
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Now we repeat this for several different types of movements,
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say, open/close your hand or pincer-grip your finger.
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Now, that may not seem like much,
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but these become the building blocks for every single interaction
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on a digital device that is needed for control.
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Converted to
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click, up, down, left, right, menu, back, etc.
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But what's really amazing is that to some degree,
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this process,
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our brain signals, are universal.
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So the brain signal for “Press down your foot” for me
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is the same as it is for you.
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Now this means that we're creating a dictionary of the brain
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across all humans.
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This is going to make BCI truly scalable.
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As Philip once said to me,
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"It's kind of like learning how to ride a bike.
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It takes a bit of practice, but once you're rolling,
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it becomes natural.
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Now I just look on the screen where I want to click and I'm texting,
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messaging the world via Twitter."
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But Graham,
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he said, as his ALS was progressing,
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that it gave him immense comfort to know that even if his body was failing,
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he was always going to be able to tell his wife that he loved her.
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In the future,
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I'm really excited about the breakthroughs BCI could deliver to other conditions
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like epilepsy, depression and dementia.
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But beyond that,
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what is this going to mean for humanity?
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What's really got me thinking is the future of communication.
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Take emotion.
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Have you ever considered how hard it is to express how you feel?
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You have to self-reflect,
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package the emotion into words
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and then use the muscles of your mouth to speak those words.
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But you really just want someone to know how you feel.
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For some people with certain conditions,
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that's impossible.
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So what if, rather than using your words,
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you could throw your emotion just for a few seconds?
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And have them really feel how you feel.
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At that moment, we would have realized
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that the necessary use of words to express our current state of being
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was always going to fall short.
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The full potential of the brain would then be unlocked.
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But for right now,
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BCI is about restoring the lives of millions of people with paralysis.
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After years of feeling trapped,
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this technology promises the return of autonomy and independence.
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But what I really mean is dignity.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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