Der querschnittsgelähmte niederländische Patient Gert-Jan (Mitte) geht dank des Brain Computer Interface (BCI), das gedankengesteuertes Gehen nach einer Rückenmarksverletzung ermöglicht.
JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT / Keystone / picturedesk.com
Download von www.picturedesk.com am 25.05.2023 (15:56).  EMBARGO UNTIL MAY 24, 17:00 CET - Dutch paraplegic patient Gert-Jan, center, walks thanks the Brain Computer Interface (BCI) enables thought-controlled walking after spinal cord injury, during a press conference in Lausanne, Switzerland, Tuesday, May 23, 2023. Neuroscientists from EPFL, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, CHUV/UNIL, Lausanne University Hospital and CEA, University Grenoble Alpes Hospital CHUGA, University Grenoble Alpes UGA, will publish in the prestigious scientific journals Nature that they have re-established the communication between the brain and spinal cord with a wireless digital bridge, allowing a paralyzed person to walk again naturally. (KEYSTONE/Jean-Christophe Bott) - 20230524_PD7344 - Rechteinfo: Rights Managed (RM)
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