Science Corp. Raises $230 Million To Advance Brain-Computer Interface Implant For Vision Restoration
Science Corporation, a brain-computer interface startup founded by former Neuralink president Max Hodak, said Wednesday it has raised $230 million in a Series ...
Research teams at Mayo Clinic campuses help patients with medical illness to adapt to their medical conditions and implement positive lifestyle changes.
China is advancing rapidly in brain-computer interface (BCI) technology, aiming to implement practical products in three to five years. In its new strategic plan, Beijing prioritizes BCIs alongside ...
China's BCI market estimated to reach $809 million by 2027 China expanding clinical trials, state support for BCIs Aims to close gap between research, industry and clinic BEIJING, March 8 (Reuters) - ...
Science Corp secures $230M funding to accelerate its brain-computer interface technology and retinal implant designed to restore vision ...
Science Corp., a developer of brain-computer interfaces and other medical equipment, today announced that it has raised $230 million in funding. The capital came from a consortium that included ...
Science Corp., a biotech startup focused on brain-computer interface technologies, announced Thursday that it has closed on a ...
Those claims haven’t gone unnoticed. Hodak’s startup, Science Corporation, said Wednesday morning that it has raised $230 million in a Series C funding round. A source close to the startup says the ...
No one has had a Synchron brain-computer interface longer than Rodney Gorham. He’s still finding new ways to use it.
In May 2025, a €4 million grant was awarded to INBRAIN Neuroelectronic, a company developing precision graphene-based brain-computer interfaces, by the Spanish Ministry of Industry and Tourism through ...
This patient disease education initiative and award highlights exceptional people who have inspired others through ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New bio-implant could finally repair broken spinal cords
A series of converging advances in bio-implant technology, from brain-spine interfaces to lab-grown spinal tissue, is bringing the long-elusive goal of spinal cord repair closer to clinical reality.
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