Brain Tech Is Here and Not as Creepy as You Think

A middle-aged man who works in emergency services in the US had been battling depression and suicidal thoughts for 17 years, unable to sleep most nights and leaving his wife and teen daughter walking on eggshells because of his irritability, before he opted for a shot in the dark. Researchers at the University of Washington asked if he’d participate in a study on a brain implant that could, maybe, treat the condition. Eric, who requested a pseudonym to protect his identity in talking with me, jumped at the chance. He only got nervous two days before his surgery. “It occurred to me I’m getting something implanted very close to my brain,” he remembers.

This month marks a year since Eric became one of the first humans to trial the chip, developed by Inner Cosmos, a startup in Scotts Valley, California, near Santa Cruz. The results are promising. Over the last six months his MADRS scores, which measure the severity of depression, have dropped, suggesting he’s now in remission. Even his family has noticed the change, Eric told me in his first interview since having the chip implanted.

About a third of patients with depression don’t respond to antidepressants, and Eric is one of them. For years, their next best option has been a 40-year-old procedure called transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), where the patient sits in a chair while a magnetic paddle is held against their head, delivering pulses to specific areas of the brain over about 30 minutes. That’s different from electroshock therapy which triggers seizures throughout the brain. Though TMS is effective, working for about 60% of patients, most struggle with the logistics of traveling to a hospital every day for a month or more to have it done.

Eric’s chip, a round, flat disc implanted just above his skull, means he can administer the procedure himself any time he likes by activating the chip with a separate handheld device. At first, the sensation was a bit like the pressure you’d feel in your palm if you pressed your thumb into it, he says. Now he barely feels it, and can activate the Inner Cosmos implant while mowing his lawn or having coffee, though he doesn’t use it while driving.

Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), also referred to as neurotechnology or just brain chips, have been slowly making waves. The market was catalyzed by the launch of Elon Musk’s Neuralink, which has helped its first quadriplegic patient, Noland Arbaugh, navigate the internet and play computer games. Venture capital firms poured $953 million into neurotechnology startups last year.

brain tech boom

The field was born in the 19th century, when French physician Paul Broca discovered that a specific region of the brain controlled speech, laying the foundation for the study of machines that could target other brain areas to treat disorders.