Wednesday, 30 October 2013

DARPA’s Real-Time Brain Monitoring Implant Should Be Ready by 2018


DARPA’s Real-Time Brain Monitoring Implant Should Be Ready by 2018
DARPA is seeking to understand more about how the brain works in hopes of developing effective therapies for troops and veterans. It has announced a new $70 million project called the Systems-Based Neurotechnology for Emerging Therapies (Subnets).

Subnets is inspired by Deep Brain Stimulation, or DBS, a surgical treatment that involves implanting a brain pacemaker in the patient’s skull to interfere with brain activity and help with symptoms of diseases like epilepsy and Parkinson’s. DARPA’s device will be similar, but rather than targeting one specific symptom, it will be able to monitor and analyze data in real time and issue a specific intervention according to brain activity.

"If Subnets is successful, it will advance neuropsychiatry beyond the realm of dialogue-driven observations and resultant trial and error and into the realm of therapy driven by quantifiable characteristics of neural state," DARPA program manager Justin Sanchez said…

DARPA will collate data from volunteers seeking treatment for unrelated neurological disorders as well as clinical research participants to construct models of how the brain behaves in normal and impaired conditions, with a focus on post-traumatic stress disorder, major depression, borderline personality disorder, general anxiety disorder, traumatic brain injury, substance abuse/addiction, and fibromyalgia/chronic pain. It hopes to have its device ready in five years.

Source:
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-57609629-1/darpa-developing-implant-to-monitor-brain-in-real-time/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=title
Image via Wikimedia Commons

2 comments:

  1. suppose someone hacks it ..... aaaa eee oooo uuuuu

    ReplyDelete
  2. Meanwhile, in our lab, we are starting our own project of brain activity monitoring during anestesia with no money, fewer people but great motivation...

    ReplyDelete