Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun An integrated circuit designed to interface with neurons

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

neuro- +‎ chip

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Examples

  • Soon, a silicon 'neurochip' to hear what human brain cells are saying

    Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7 2010

  • Toronto, August 10: Calgary scientists will create a 'neurochip', which will monitor the dialogue between brain cell and silicon chip.

    dailyindia.com News Feed 2010

  • Soon, a silicon 'neurochip' to hear what human brain cells are saying

    dailyindia.com News Feed 2010

  • Soon, a silicon 'neurochip' to hear what human brain cells are saying

    Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7 2010

  • But now it's like putting a microphone beside them, "the Globe and Mail quoted Professor Naweed Syed, head of the university's department of cell biology and anatomy, who has led the work on the so-called neurochip, as saying.

    dailyindia.com News Feed 2010

  • The most promising progress in information processing concerns a neurochip that places organic neurons onto a network of silicon or other materials.

    What we get from Technologies in Future. 2008

  • Pet peeve in the neurochip story: "They used special proteins found in the brain to glue brain cells, called neurons, onto the chip."

    Mind Hacks: 2006-03-31 Spike activity 2006

  • Calgary's Health Sciences Centre. with an extreme close-up of the neurochip displayed on a computer screen.

    The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed 2010

  • Being able to monitor the dialogue between cell and silicon chip is a crucial step toward one day manipulating it, raising the possibility of neurochip implants that can operate artificial limbs, help restore sight or language after a stroke, or repair neurons that malfunction in a wide range of brain disorders, from Parkinson's disease to Alzheimer's.

    The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed 2010

  • The 53-year-old Dr. Syed, who grew up watching The Six Million Dollar Man, said he sees the neurochip as an evolving work that will eventually stand as an implantable device that could direct brain cells to either fire up or say, "Hey, guys, calm down."

    The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed 2010

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