A patient wearing a brain-computer interface device with visible electrodes and embedded hardware, assisted by medical staff in a clinical lab setting.

Why This Brain-Controlled Exoskeleton Matters for Rehabilitation Infrastructure, Not Consumer Wearables

A new brain-computer interface result stands out for one specific reason: it did not just decode walking intent, it paired real-time exoskeleton control with bilateral sensory feedback on a portable embedded system. That makes it more relevant to rehabilitation engineering for paraplegic spinal cord injury patients than to the common narrative that exoskeleton BCIs are…

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