From Neuralink’s perspective, 2024 could be called the year of Noland Arbaugh. The company’s clinical team really had a lucky hand in choosing the first candidate. It’s hard to imagine a better applicant. Noland is very open about everything related to the interface and his life. He is a natural speaker and has no problem with the media. He gives a lot of interviews and is active on social media. It’s all just the greatest PR for Neuralink.
The first N1 implant in a human was by far the most significant event of the year for Neuralink. However, during the year, the company also managed to implant the interface a second time, received approval for tests in Canada and significantly advanced preparations for testing of the new visual prosthesis. In this article, we summarize the most important milestones of the year and try to predict what we may see in 2025.
The year 2024 will forever be remembered in Neuralink’s history as the year of the first human implantation of its neural interface. However, there have also been a number of other significant milestones.
Neuralink finally implanted its neural interface into a human user for the first time, less than eight years after its founding in 2016. Elon Musk announced it in X post:
As it turned out, the first patient was Noland Arbaugh, a 29-year-old quadriplegic from Yuma, Arizona, former Texas A&M student. Despite his disability, Noland is very open, has a brilliant sense of humor and is slowly becoming an Internet sensation having almost 130k followers on X.
A few weeks after the surgery, a problem with the implanted electrode threads occurred. Most of them became loose and pulled away from Noland’s brain. Only about 15% of the electrodes remained active. This temporarily degraded the implant’s performance. However, in response to this change, Neuralink specialists:
These optimizations brought rapid and sustained improvements in interface performance, and today Noland is once again breaking his previous interface throughput records.
Neuralink gave a presentation on X showing plans how to resolve the situation with electrode threads retractions in further users. Elon Musk announced that the company is already preparing for a second implantation in a human user and that several more patients should use the interface by the end of the year 2024. In the second part of the live broadcast, the participants also answered several questions from X users.
In the main part of the presentation, Neuralink representatives showed presumed causes of the electrode threads’ retractions in the first study participant and several ways in which they intend, without any change to the current hardware, to prevent the threads from pulling out of the brain in other users. Neuralink specialists saw the main reason for retractions as greater than expected movement of the brain in the skull. Among the measures to eliminate the problem were:
A second patient named Alex was given the Neuralink interface sometime in late July 2024. However, he is the opposite of Noland in terms of public openness, and we haven’t learned much about him yet.
Thanks to a post on the Neuralink blog, we know that he is a man. He is a quadriplegic, meaning he cannot move any of his limbs. He is probably around 25-35 years old. He likes to play computer games, specifically Counter Strike 2. His surgery was also performed at the Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, Arizona. He has one Neuralink implant, probably in the motor area of the brain, specifically in the part responsible for the movements of one of his hands.
There were no complications during and after Alex’s surgery. He left the hospital the next day and recovered without problems. Thanks to Elon Musk’s interview with Lex Fridman, we also know that Alex’s implant has around 400 active electrodes, which Elon says is a good result. Once he learned how to operate the interface, he started working with the Fusion 360 CAD software and even designed his own interface charger holder, which was then 3D printed and integrated into his special computer desk. Here’s a video of Alex working with the CAD software:
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has designated Neuralink’s upcoming vision prosthesis, called Blindsight, as a “Breakthrough Device”. This is the first significant step toward approval for an initial clinical trial. The Breakthrough Devices Program should provide Neuralink with an acceleration of the FDA approval process.
Blindsight, a vision prosthesis, is supposed to be Neuralink’s second product after “Telepathy”, an interface controlling computers and other devices using just thoughts. Blindsight should provide vision even for the people who have been blind since birth. At first with low resolution, later getting much better, and eventually even in various electromagnetic spectra, similar to Jordi La Forge from the series Star Trek: The Next Generation.
A year and a half after receiving approval for human testing in the US, Neuralink has been granted permission to test in Canada. Health Canada, the agency responsible for Canadian federal health policy, granted Neuralink a clinical trial permit.
The trials will be conducted at the Krembil Brain Institute of The University Health Network (UHN) in Toronto. The study will have three objectives, as in the US:
Neuralink has received official permission to test controlling robotic arms. The N1 interface, which already has two users, will be used not only to control computers, but also robotic upper limbs.
Neuralink may use Tesla’s Optimus robot arm for these tests. The question is how many movements can be mapped to the N1 interface. The latest version of the Optimus hand has 22 degrees of freedom. This is what the hand looked like at the We, Robot presentation, where the Tesla Cybercab autonomous vehicle was introduced:
Let’s try to predict what Neuralink could bring next year:
Neuralink planned to have 10-11 patients by the end of 2024. It probably didn’t happen, unless the company is hiding something. We know for sure about two users. The 10-11 patients mentioned could be real by the end of 2025.
Today, the table of Neuralink interface users looks like this:
# | Name: | Gender: | Age at Implantation: | Implantation Date: | Implantation Site: | Clinic: | Device type: | Number of Implants: | Cerebral Hemisphere: | Brain Area: |
1 | Noland Arbaugh | male | 29 | January 28, 2024 | Phoenix, Arizona | Barrow Neurological Institute | N1 Telepathy | 1 | left | motor cortex, right hand area |
2 | Alex | male | — | late July 2024 | Phoenix, Arizona | Barrow Neurological Institute | N1 Telepathy | 1 | — | — |
That’s quite likely. Permission for testing was granted. The clinic has been chosen. The patient registry in Canada has been operating for almost a year. All that’s left is to select suitable candidates and perform surgery.
This might seem quite likely, given that UK patient registry has already been established. However, politics may come in play. The current British government does not really like Elon Musk, to put it mildly.
Spinal cord bridging is expected to be the third Neuralink’s product. The company has been working on it for several years. The first step towards human testing will be, as with the “Telepathy” and “Blindsight”, the FDA’s “Breakthrough Device” designation. It may possibly come next year.
This probably won’t happen next year. More likely in 2026.
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