A huge inrease in bandwidth.
A team of Stanford scientists claims to have tested a new brain-computer interface that can decode speech at up to 62 words per minute, improving the previous record by 3.4 times.
The goal was to give those who can no longer speak due to ALS or stroke their voice back. While keyboard-based solutions have allowed those with paralysis to communicate again to a certain degree, a brain-based speech interface could speed up the decoding significantly. Using a recurrent neural network decoder that can predict text, the researchers then turned these signals into words — and at a surprisingly fast pace.
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