Researchers have developed a novel neuromorphic silicon neuron controller, named SiLIF-DBS, for adaptive deep brain stimulation (aDBS) in Parkinson's disease patients. This controller, implemented using CMOS technology, aims to provide more intelligent and power-efficient DBS by tracking symptom fluctuations. In simulations, the SiLIF-DBS controller effectively suppressed pathological beta activity in the brain while consuming significantly less power than traditional open-loop stimulation methods. AI
IMPACT This neuromorphic controller could lead to more efficient and effective treatments for Parkinson's disease by enabling adaptive deep brain stimulation.
RANK_REASON This is a research paper detailing a new hardware controller for a medical application. [lever_c_demoted from research: ic=1 ai=0.7]
Read on arXiv cs.NE (Neural & Evolutionary) →
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