First brain chip patient of Elon Musk’s Neuralink shown playing online chess

21 March 2024, 09:54

Elon Musk
Elon Musk. Picture: PA

Noland Arbaugh, 29, is paralysed below the shoulders but he has now been able to control a PC using just his mind.

The first patient to have a computer chip implanted into their brain by Elon Musk’s Neuralink has been shown using the device to control a PC.

In a livestream posted to X, formerly Twitter, 29-year-old Noland Arbaugh showed how he could move a computer cursor using just his mind to play chess online.

Mr Arbaugh said he had been paralysed below the shoulders after a diving accident several years ago, and he underwent surgery to have the Neuralink chip implanted in January.

It aims to give those with paralysis the ability to control their devices, including their smartphone, using just their thoughts, and it is currently being trialled to test the functionality of its interface and the surgical robot used to implant the chips, having received approval in the US to test the chip on humans.

The Neuralink device can read brain neuron activity and beam back a wireless signal to a receiving unit, which then connects with a user’s device and enables them to control it.

During the livestream, Mr Arbaugh said the surgery to implant the chip was “super easy”, and he also demonstrated how he could use the chip to play video game Civilisation VI.

He said Neuralink had given him “the ability to do that again” and that he had played “for eight hours straight”.

However, he added the device is not perfect and he had encountered “some issues”.

When the successful surgery was announced in January, Mr Musk took to X to explain the early plans for Neuralink.

He said: “Initial users will be those who have lost the use of their limbs.

“Imagine if Stephen Hawking could communicate faster than a speed typist or auctioneer. That is the goal.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Google CEO visit to UK

Google boss ‘cautiously optimistic’ about protecting elections from deepfakes

Radio Frequency Directed Energy Weapon

New weapon being developed to blast drones out of sky with radio waves, says MoD

Google I/O developer conference

Google tackles phone theft with new safety features coming to Android

Apple iPhone 15s on display

Apple brings eye tracking to iPhone and iPad in accessibility update

Google I/O developer conference

What do Google’s AI updates mean for everyday users?

Person running

Technology cannot replace human coaches in obesity treatment – study

Google I/O developer conference

The key announcements from Google’s I/O conference

Google discussing new AI tools during its Google I/O developer conference

Google AI updates a ‘direct response’ to ChatGPT dominance, experts say

Google chief executive Sundar Pichai speaking on stage at the firm's Google I/O developer conference

Google rebuilds search engine around AI and unveils new image and video tools

A person using a smartphone

Children ‘blackmailed into stripping for strangers’ on daily basis, says MP

Intelligence community ethnic minorities positions

China poses ‘genuine and increasing’ cyber risk to UK, GCHQ chief warns

Someone at a laptop

Research team finds AI slashes carbon capture and storage design time

AI chatbot eye problem assessing

New free ChatGPT model can teach maths, sing and even flirt

Open AI ChatGPT Update

OpenAI unveils new ‘smarter, faster’ version of ChatGPT

Google Stock

Google I/O: Tech conference expected to be dominated by AI

Claude 2 AI and ChatGPT icons seen in an iPhone

OpenAI rival Anthropic launches AI assistant Claude in European Union