06/01/2026
“It’s helpful to think about BCI as a communication tool. Like any communication device, bandwidth matters. What you can do with a 56K modem, maybe chat on AOL, is very different from what you can do with a fiber optic connection, Netflix. It’s the same thing in BCI. Very low electrode count systems are able to enable a click on a computer mouse, maybe a few directions on a cursor. What our system is designed to enable is rich control of sophisticated applications, whether it’s photo editing, or productivity software. Our bar is really to meet and eventually exceed what people who are able bodied do with a computer or a digital device”.
Taken from a new interview with cheddar news, Chris Castellino sits down with Precision Neuroscience CEO & Co-Founder Michael Mager for an inside look at the future of brain-computer interfaces. The feature takes viewers inside the Precision lab, offering a detailed look at how our Layer 7 BCI is designed and built — including an in-depth overview of the Layer 7 array itself and how its 1,024 electrodes work together to capture neural activity at high resolution. The conversation also explores why Precision built our own supply chain from the ground up to manufacture our BCIs — a critical step in scaling this technology for the future.
Watch below.
Precision Neuroscience is implanting human brains with a device thinner than a human hair. Inside the $400B race to connect your brain to a computer.