The new glassy-carbon electrodes developed by the Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering (CSNE) have the potential to restore movement in people with spinal cord injuries.
Brain-computer interface technology uses electrodes to record brain signals at the moment a person intends to make a movement, enabling the interface to learn the signal pattern for that movement and transmit the pattern to the limb's nerves. The current material used in these devices' electrodes is thin-film platinum, which fractures over time.
The new electrodes are made out of glassy carbon, which is about 10 times smoother than thin-film platinum. In addition, this form of carbon corrodes less easily under electrical stimulation, lasts longer, and produces a much clearer signal than platinum or other metal electrodes.
CSNE researchers are using the improved brain-computer interface to record neural signals both along the brain's cortical surface and from deeper inside the brain at the same time.
From SDSU NewsCenter (CA)
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