What has China done now? This machine will know your mind in a few seconds, will also decode the language

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China Mind Reading Machine: China, which is growing rapidly in the world of technology, has recently created a surprising machine. Actually, such a machine has been invented that will read your mind, that too within a few seconds.

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China Mind Reading Machine: China is very ahead in the technological world and is competing with countries like America and Japan. Chinese startup 'NeuroAccess' has announced its two successful tests on Thursday. The company's brain-computer interface (BCI) device understood what the patient was thinking in real time and in the second test, decoded the Chinese language in real time.

Through BCI technology, patients can now control software with just their minds, move objects, interact with AI models, and control digital avatars as they speak, Xinhua reported.

In August 2024, neurosurgeons at Huashan Hospital, affiliated to Shanghai's Fudan University, installed a 256-channel flexible BCI device in the brain of a 21-year-old female patient (who had epilepsy). This device was installed to correct the tumor present in the motor area of the patient's brain. According to NeuroAccess, his team extracted electrocorticogram (ECoG) signals of high-gamma bands from the patient's brain and created a neural network model to understand them. The technique produced accurate results in less than 60 milliseconds and mapped out functional areas of the brain within minutes of the operation.

Language is considered to be the greatest achievement of human civilization. Understanding speech through brain gestures is an exciting area in the making of BCI technology. In December 2024, a team conducted the first clinical trial of flexible BCI to synthesize Chinese speech. In this test, a 256-channel BCI device was implanted in the brain of a female patient. The patient had epilepsy and had a tumour in the language area of his brain. The patient achieved 71% speech decoding accuracy within five days, based on a set of 142 normal Chinese characters, which took less than 100 milliseconds to decipher each letter.