Brain-Matter Interface!

China: Socialist Science Breaks Brain-Computer-Matter Interface! (24.12.2025)

A patient suffering from tetraplegia steered a smart wheelchair through the neighbourhood with only his thoughts and directed a robotic dog to fetch a food delivery. These scenes were achieved during a recent clinical trial of a brain-computer interface conducted by a team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).

This shattered the conventional boundaries of rehabilitation, carrying the brain’s command from a two-dimensional cursor on a screen into full-bodied, three-dimensional interaction with the physical world.

Brain-computer interfaces are designed to create a direct communication channel between the brain and external devices. Around the world, research groups have already demonstrated the laboratory feats, including “mind typing” and robotic-arm control. The enduring challenge is to make those systems reliable enough to vanish into a patient’s daily life.

China successfully conducts clinical trial for invasive brain-computer interface

China: Socialist Science Successfully Carries-Out “Invasive Brain-Computer Interface”! (17.6.2025)

There is a world of difference between a Socialist country progressing medical science (like China) – and a capitalist country (like America). When China developed a cure for Lung Cancer and then immediately began the deployment of that treatment to the poorest villages in China – President Trump (first time around) referred to that great achievement as “a clear indication of the evilness of Socialism”. Socialist medicine seeks to improve all of humanity by removing poverty and inequality because it is right to do so – whereas capitalist medicine seeks to enrich the already wealthy and build an impenetrable pay-wall between the latest available medicine and the poor who need it most. This is what is at stake. This is why we must support Socialism!

Lobes of the Human Brain!

China: Scientists Map Neural Network of Hippocampus in Mouse Brain! (5.2.2024)

“Such previously unknown spatial organization principles of single neuron projections will provide a structural basis for a better understanding the function of hippocampal neurons,” said Xu Chun, a leading researcher on the team and a correspondent author of the paper.

“This enormous dataset (in the paper) provides unprecedented insights into the divergence of hippocampal output, bilateral projections and some of the principles of hippocampal projections at the level of individual neurons,” said one peer review.

Poo said the research results will provide a foundation to work out a function map of the single neurons in the mouse hippocampus to discover how signals are transmitted and which single neurons and signals are related to particular brain functions, such as memory, learning and emotions.