Less-Invasive Brain Interfaces
November 21, 2008 | Source: Technology Review
Using electrocorticography (ECoG) — recording neural activity from a sheet of electrodes laid directly on the surface of a patient’s brain — scientists have found they can predict the movement of fingers and which of several sounds the patient is imagining.

(Gerwin Schalk/Journal of Neural Engineering)
They hope to use the findings to develop intuitive brain-computer interfaces and neural prostheses.