While it may sound like science fiction, engineers at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory are collaborating with neurosurgeons at UCLA, to develop the world’s first implantable neural device that can record and stimulate neurons to help the brain restore memory. Lab research engineer Angela Tooker says there are a number of neural implants out there, but none are microfabricated.
"Our technology, because it’s so small, it’s microfabricated, we can put thousands of electrodes onto these, so we can access thousands of neurons within your brain and so we can access all of them and we can go pretty much anywhere in the brain you want to go."
A target population for these neural implants would be patients with Alzheimer’s disease, as well as those suffering from traumatic brain injuries, including returning veterans.
"Memories are formed by the development of neural pathways. What happens if you lose memory is somewhere along that chain that connection has been cut. And so what we want to do is actually be able to bridge the gap. Our device can be implanted pretty much where that break is, that’s what we’re looking to do, essentially bridge that gap."