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US FDA gives nod to Musk’s Neuralink to implant brain chip in 2nd person

The approval for the second person to have a Neuralink chip came as the first recipient — Noland Armagh in the US — detailed his emotional journey.

US FDA gives nod to Musk’s Neuralink to implant brain chip in 2nd person

Elon Musk (file photo)

Tesla CEO Elon Musk-run brain-computer interface company Neuralink has reportedly received a nod from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to implant its brain chip in a second person.

The approval for the second person to have a Neuralink chip came as the first recipient — Noland Armagh in the US — detailed his emotional journey.

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The latest chip in the second recipient comes with some fixes, like embedding some of the device’s ultrathin wires deeper into the brain, The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

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Musk or Neuralink were yet to officially react to the development.

The Neuralink chip can help restore full body control in people suffering from paralysis. The company earlier achieved a successful brain-chip implant with Armagh and began the applications for the second participant for the chip implant.

According to Musk, the company can bridge “severed nerve signals to a second Neuralink in the spine, restoring full body control”.

With the chip in his brain, Arbaugh has enabled “telepathic control of a computer or phone just by thinking”. The Neuralink trials aim to assess the initial functionality of the wireless brain-computer interface for enabling people with paralysis to control external devices with their thoughts.

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