Advances in Brain-Computer Interfaces Enable Thought-to-Voice Translation

TL;DR Summary
Researchers at Stanford have developed a brain-computer interface that can decode inner speech from neural activity, raising both exciting possibilities for communication for those with paralysis and significant privacy concerns about mind reading without consent. The system can interpret imagined words with over 70% accuracy, but also risks unintended thought leaks, prompting calls for safeguards and regulation to protect mental privacy as the technology advances.
Topics:technology#brain-computer-interface#inner-speech-decoding#mind-reading#neural-implants#privacy-concerns#science-and-technology
- Brain Implant Translates Silent Inner Speech into Words, But Critics Raise Fears of Mind Reading Without Consent ZME Science
- For Some Patients, the ‘Inner Voice’ May Soon Be Audible The New York Times
- How a brain-computer chip can read people's minds Euronews.com
- Machine Learning Contest Aims to Improve Speech BCIs IEEE Spectrum
- Scientists develop interface that ‘reads’ thoughts from speech-impaired patients Stanford Report
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