Engineers print artificial neurons that communicate with mouse brain cells
Updated
Updated · Livescience.com · Apr 23
Engineers print artificial neurons that communicate with mouse brain cells
8 articles · Updated · Livescience.com · Apr 23
The Nature Nanotechnology study, published on 15 April, was led by Northwestern University's Mark Hersam using printable inks containing molybdenum disulfide and graphene on flexible polymer substrates.
Tests on mouse brain slices showed biological neurons fired in step with the printed devices, suggesting signals could be decoded like natural tissue and supporting neuromorphic computing and future brain-computer interfaces.
Researchers say the technology could improve AI energy efficiency and eventually aid prosthetics or damaged brain function, but experts caution long-term communication with living neurons and full circuit integration remain unresolved.
How can simple printable inks replicate the complexity of a human neuron?
Could these artificial neurons one day restore memory for Alzheimer's patients?
What is the biggest hurdle to building a complete artificial brain?
Can brain-like computers solve the AI industry's massive energy crisis?
As machines and brains merge, who will own your thoughts and memories?