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 brain surgery


Rice-sized robot could make brain surgery safer and less invasive

FOX News

Surgeries may become safer and more precise than ever before. A French startup named Robeauté has just raised about 29 million to develop a truly groundbreaking neurosurgical microrobot. Imagine a device no bigger than a grain of rice that can carefully navigate the complex and delicate pathways of the brain. This little robot could change the way doctors treat brain tumors and other neurological conditions, making surgeries safer and more precise than ever before. Join The FREE CyberGuy Report: Get my expert tech tips, critical security alerts, and exclusive deals -- plus instant access to my free Ultimate Scam Survival Guide when you sign up! Brain surgery is incredibly complex.


An Ultrathin Graphene Brain Implant Was Just Tested in a Person

WIRED

In 2004, Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov at the University of Manchester in England achieved a breakthrough when they isolated graphene for the first time. A flat form of carbon made up of a single layer of atoms, graphene is the thinnest known material--and one of the strongest. Hailed as a wonder material, it won Geim and Novoselov a Nobel Prize in 2010. Twenty years later, graphene is finally making its way into batteries, sensors, semiconductors, air conditioners, and even headphones. And now, it's being tested on people's brains.


Brain Surgery: Ensuring GDPR Compliance in Large Language Models via Concept Erasure

Laurelli, Michele

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

As large-scale AI systems proliferate, ensuring compliance with data privacy laws such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has become critical. This paper introduces Brain Surgery, a transformative methodology for making every local AI model GDPR-ready by enabling real-time privacy management and targeted unlearning. Building on advanced techniques such as Embedding-Corrupted Prompts (ECO Prompts), blockchain-based privacy management, and privacy-aware continual learning, Brain Surgery provides a modular solution that can be deployed across various AI architectures. This tool not only ensures compliance with privacy regulations but also empowers users to define their own privacy limits, creating a new paradigm in AI ethics and governance.


Health's weekend read includes Taylor Swift's impact amid brain surgery, seniors' health struggles and more

FOX News

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. Fox News Digital publishes an array of health pieces all week long to keep you in the know on a range of wellness topics: health care access, innovative surgeries, cancer research, mental health trends and more -- plus, personal stories of people and families overcoming great obstacles. As you wind down your weekend, check out some of the top stories of the week in Health that you may have missed, or have been meaning to check out. These are just a few of what's new, of course.


Robo-Insight #5

Robohub

Source: OpenAI's DALL·E 2 with prompt "a hyperrealistic picture of a robot reading the news on a laptop at a coffee shop" Welcome to the 5th edition of Robo-Insight, a robotics news update! In this post, we are excited to share a range of new advancements in the field and highlight robots' progress in areas like human-robot interaction, agile movement, enhanced training methods, soft robotics, brain surgery, medical navigation, and ecological research. In the realm of human-robot interactions, researchers from around Europe have developed a new tool called HEUROBOX to assess interactions. HEUROBOX offers 84 basic and 228 advanced heuristics for evaluating various aspects of human-robot interaction, such as safety, ergonomics, functionality, and interfaces. It places a strong emphasis on human-centered design, addressing the vital connection between technology and human factors.


Automated robotic intraoperative ultrasound for brain surgery

Dyck, Michael, Weld, Alistair, Klodmann, Julian, Kirst, Alexander, Anichini, Giulio, Dixon, Luke, Camp, Sophie, Giannarou, Stamatia, Albu-Schäffer, Alin

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

During brain tumour resection, localising cancerous tissue and delineating healthy and pathological borders is challenging, even for experienced neurosurgeons and neuroradiologists [1]. Intraoperative imaging is commonly employed for determining and updating surgical plans in the operating room. Ultrasound (US) has presented itself a suitable tool for this task, owing to its ease of integration into the operating room and surgical procedure. However, widespread establishment of this tool has been limited because of the difficulty of anatomy localisation and data interpretation. Experimental setup showing the robotic arm with it's attached This ensures the presence [3] presents an automated method for lung diagnosis, using of random features within the US recordings of the phantom.


AI algorithm that detects brain defects could help cure hard-to-spot epilepsy, study suggests

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Scientists have developed an AI that detect early signs of epilepsy that even experienced medics could miss. It was able to detect six in 10 patients with a rare form of the condition, compared to an MRI which did not spot any. Epilepsy, which affects one in 100 Britons and Americans, causes uncontrolled bursts of electrical activity in the brain that trigger seizures. One cause of epilepsy is drug-resistant focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), a subtle abnormality in the brain that causes signals to misfire. It can only be treated with surgery.


'CRTA' visual identity was created by using artificial intelligence

#artificialintelligence

CRTA is a regional center of excellence for robotic technology within the faculty of mechanical engineering and naval architecture at the university of zagreb, croatia. 'the visual representation of the concepts contained in the definition of the word line is a symbolic representation of the process of growth i.e. the trainings provided to the center's beneficiaries.


An AI-guided Pacemaker For the Brain Boosts Learning

#artificialintelligence

Quick: what do you get when you combine an AI, a dozen electrodes and the human brain? Specifically, verbal memory that helps you remember a list of random words, a speech or maybe parts of a book you recently read. Plus it happens without any effort on your part or outside interference. Duh, you're probably thinking, I've heard this before. Yes, brain stimulation has been on a roll for the past few years.


Tumor Tissue Imaging and AI Bypass Path Lab for Brain Surgeries

#artificialintelligence

In a major development in how tumors are excised, researchers at the University of Michigan have shown that it's possible to accurately analyze brain tumor tissue within the operating room and assess its nature using artificial intelligence. Tumor tissues typically look just like the healthy stuff around them. When a tumor is removed, parts that are near the edges (margins) are sent to the pathology lab for review. After staining and observations using a microscope, the pathologist can let the surgical team know whether it removed all of the tumor or left some behind. This takes a long time, so much so that typically a follow-up surgery is required if the margins are not completely excised.