Researchers have developed a novel training protocol for brain-computer interfaces in a study with rhesus monkeys. The method enables precise control of prosthetic hands using signals from the brain alone. Researchers were able to show that the neural signals that control the different hand postures in the brain are primarily important for this control, and not, as previously assumed, signals that control the movement's velocity. The results are essential for improving the fine control of neural hand prostheses, which could give paralyzed patients back some or all of their mobility (Neuron).
source https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/10/241017112732.htm
I've studied organizational failure for decades—the Church of England needs
more than a new leader
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In a book I wrote with a colleague on organizational failures (The Apology
Impulse) the inability of many of them to confront their failures, except
to say...
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