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Scientists Taught Brains A New Language Using Light

Northwestern University scientists have created a wireless brain implant around the size of a postage stamp and thinner than a credit card that uses light to send information directly to the brain, bypassing natural sensory pathways in what researchers are calling a major leap for neurobiology with immense therapeutic potential. The device features a programmable array of up to 64 micro-LEDs with real-time control over each light, allowing scientists to send complex sequences that resemble natural sensations, and in experiments mice successfully completed behavioral tasks even without touch, sight, or sound by learning to interpret the light patterns as meaningful signals. Professor Yevgenia Kozorovitskiy explained that our brains constantly turn electrical activity into experiences and this technology taps directly into that process, creating entirely new signals and bringing us closer to restoring lost senses after injuries or disease. The breakthrough builds on previous Northwestern research introducing the first fully implantable, programmable, wireless, battery-free device capable of controlling neurons with light, with this new study enabling richer and more flexible brain communication through patterned bursts activating specific neuron groups.

Professor John Rogers noted that developing the device required rethinking how to deliver patterned stimulation in a minimally invasive and fully implantable format, moving beyond simply activating single neuron regions. Because real sensory experiences activate distributed cortical networks rather than tiny localized groups, the multi-region design mimics natural brain activity patterns, with researchers explaining that the number of patterns they can generate using various LED combinations, frequencies, intensities, and temporal sequences is nearly infinite. Potential applications include providing sensory feedback for prosthetic limbs, delivering artificial stimuli for future vision or hearing devices, modulating pain without opioids, enhancing stroke rehabilitation, and controlling robotic limbs with the brain. The team plans to test more complex patterns and explore how many distinct patterns the brain can learn, with mice proving that brains possess extraordinary abilities to adapt to entirely new sensory input forms.

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