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Apple is planning to allow users to natively control iPhones, iPads, and other devices using brain signals later this year, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Apple-Logo-Spotlight-Blue.jpg

The initiative involves a partnership with Synchron, a neurotechnology startup that produces an implantable brain-computer interface (BCI) device called the Stentrode. The Stentrode enables users with severe motor impairments, such as those caused by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), to control Apple devices using neural signals detected from within blood vessels located above the brain's motor cortex.

The Stentrode is implanted through the jugular vein and rests inside a blood vessel on the surface of the brain. The device contains 16 electrodes that can detect motor-related brain activity without requiring open-brain surgery. These neural signals are then translated into digital commands that allow users to interact with an interface.

Synchron has implanted the Stentrode in ten patients since 2019 under the FDA's investigational device exemption. One test participant based in Pennsylvania with ALS, who cannot use his arms or hands, is able to use the Apple Vision Pro and other Apple devices through thought alone, although it is slower than conventional input mechanisms.

In 2014, Apple introduced the "Made for iPhone" hearing aid protocol as a Bluetooth standard that enables seamless wireless communication between hearing aids and Apple devices. The company is now apparently pursuing a similar approach with brain-computer interfaces, aiming to establish a dedicated industry standard in collaboration with Synchron.

Apple is apparently planning to add support for BCIs into its existing Switch Control accessibility framework, which allows input from non-standard devices such as joysticks and adaptive hardware. The company reportedly intends to release this new standard later in 2025.

Synchron's approach differs significantly from that of other companies such as Neuralink, which is developing a more invasive implant called the N1. Neuralink's device contains more than 1,000 electrodes embedded directly into brain tissue, providing a higher-resolution neural data stream. This allows for more complex control, including moving a cursor across a screen and typing using mental intention.

See Synchron's full press release for more information.

Article Link: Report: Apple Preparing to Launch Mind-Control Support for iPhones
 
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Reactions: JustSomebody12
Apple is the very definition of accessibility. Soon your mind can go tap, swipe, tap tap, loooog tap, swipe up...hold....short tap, double tap, tap while holding the power button...hold...quickly! press vol up, then quickly! vol down...and...double press power button...oh! you waited too long for the second press and now the screen is off.
 
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I see I’m not the only one who thought it was April 1st. But I do think Hartley used “mind control” in the headline to elicit the exact response this is getting.

Because let’s face it,

Apple Preparing to Launch Neural Signal Support for iPhones​

wouldn’t have gotten as many clicks, would it?
 
Why is this going off of a report by the Wall Street Journal?
This is not a reported feature, Apple literally announced it earlier today. It’s not a rumor.

  • “For users with severe mobility disabilities, iOS, iPadOS, and visionOS will add a new protocol to support Switch Control for Brain Computer Interfaces (BCIs), an emerging technology that allows users to control their device without physical movement.”
 
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Reactions: SFjohn
Imagine a time when you can go into the Apple Store and have one of these devices implanted while your new iPhone downloads your data from iCloud.
You’ll definitely need a genius for that! If it’s not in-store perhaps they’ll send you out to Cupertino for 2 weeks!
 
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