It might start when a person stumbles over a word. Within as few as four years, a patient with primary progressive aphasia, a neurological language disorder, could go completely mute, said Maya Henry, director of the Aphasia Research and Treatment Lab.
According to an artificial intelligence study released by UT researchers on Feb. 6, a new AI tool can read brain activity and translate it into continuous strings of text. Alexander Huth, associate professor of neuroscience…
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https://thedailytexan.com/2025/02/18/ut-researchers-develop-ai-brain-decoder-with-promising-uses-for-aphasia-patients/