Tuesday 6 December 13h – 16h & apero
Campus Biotech auditorium | In-person only
All welcome | Free to attend | Register here
Over recent years, research groups and companies have accelerated the development of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) with the goal of restoring movement and communication for people with severe paralysis.
They have pushed the boundaries of medical device miniaturization and data transfer to build fully implantable devices that wirelessly record brain activity with a variety of electrodes.
The data now being collected has tremendous potential to tackle important clinical and social needs for people with paralysis. To realize this opportunity, groups are exploring new approaches in neural signal decoding with artificial intelligence algorithms.
As the BCI community shifts its focus to clinical studies for patient benefit, join us at Campus Biotech to hear from researchers and companies working together at the forefront of BCI development discussing paths to translation and BCI home-use.
Prof. Dr. Nick Ramsey provides scientific guidance on Wyss Center programs working to restore function for people with paralysis and communication for those locked-in as a result of ALS. He also advises on strategic project planning, and contributes to external funding proposals. He brings extensive knowledge of the BCI field as well as expertise in human intracranial brain-computer interface research and knowledge of associated ethical and regulatory frameworks. Nick is Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the University of Utrecht (NL) where he leads a multidisciplinary research group.
Nick has been active in the field of implantable human BCI systems since 2005 and runs the Utrecht Neuroprosthesis project at the University Medical Center of Utrecht where people with locked-in syndrome are provided with a brain implant to operate assistive technology software.
His BCI team conducts research on decoding brain signals obtained with subdural electrode grids, aiming to employ implantable BCI devices with 32 or more amplifiers to enable operation of a speech computer. Nick has a background in Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience and has conducted extensive research on human brain function, using functional MRI and high-field MRI scanners.
After completion of his PhD in psychopharmacology (University Utrecht, NL), Nick spent several years developing functional MRI paradigms at NIH (USA). In 1995 he initiated an fMRI research lab in the Psychiatry Department of the University Medical Center of Utrecht, and became a Professor in the Neurosurgery department in 2008 where he started the combined electrocorticography-fMRI research lab he heads today.
Nick aims to translate neuroscientific findings to clinical applications, which has culminated in the Neuroprosthesis program and in a spin-off company that provides clinical fMRI to clinics (Braincarta), and which motivates his involvement in the research at the Wyss Center.
Nick was instrumental in founding the international BCI Society in 2015, of which he was President until 2019.
Prof. Dr. Gernot Müller-Putz is head of the Institute of Neural Engineering and its associated Laboratory of Brain-Computer Interfaces. He received his MSc in electrical and biomedical engineering in 2000, his PhD in electrical engineering in 2004 and his habilitation and “venia docendi” in medical informatics from Graz University of Technoloy in 2008. Since 2014 he is full professor for semantic data analysis.
He has gained extensive experience in the field of biosignal analysis, brain-computer interface research, EEG-based neuroprosthesis control, communication with BCI in patients with disorders of consciousness, hybrid BCI systems, the human somatosensory system, and BCIs in assistive technology over the past 21 years.
He has also managed several national projects (State of Styria) and international projects (Wings for Life, EU Projects). Recently, he coordinated an EU Horizon 2020 project, MoreGrasp. Furthermore, he organized and hosted seven international Brain-Computer Interface Conferences over the last 15 years in Graz, the 8th Conference in Sept. 2019. He is Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions in Biomedical Engineering and Associate Editor of the Brain-Computer Interface Journal. He has authored more than 185 peer reviewed publications and more than 200 contributions to conferences which were cited more than 19400 times (h-index 70). In 2015, he was awarded with an ERC Consolidator Grant “Feel your Reach” from the European Research Council. In May 2017 he received the Ludwig-Guttman Award from the German Medical Spinal Cord Injury Association (DMGP). In May 2018 he was elected into the Board of Directors of the International Brain-Computer Interface Society. In May 2019 he received the science prize of the state of Styria. Since August 2019 he is Editor in Chief of Frontiers in Human Neuroscience: Brain-Computer Interface.
Dr. Lorach graduated from Ecole Polytechnique in Paris and completed his PhD at the Vision Institute working on the encoding of visual information in the retina. He joined Stanford University to develop retinal implants that stimulate electrically the retina and restore visual perception to the blind. He is currently leading the Brain Spine Interface unit at Neurorestore to implement brain-controlled spinal cord stimulation strategies to restore motor function in patients with spinal cord injury.
Vincent Delattre, Ph.D. is Vice President Business Development and co-Founder of ONWARD Medical N.V. (Euronext: ONWD), which develops innovative neurostimulation therapies to empower individuals with spinal cord injuries. Applying his longstanding expertise as neuroscientist, engineer & entrepreneur in neurotechnology, he leads the company’s business and intellectual property efforts to help translate the latest scientific and clinical discoveries into scalable therapies. An expert at bridging the gap between scientific research and commercialization, Vincent has helped ONWARD raise over €150M in funding since inception in 2014.
A prolific researcher and inventor, Vincent has helped ONWARD obtain over 310 issued or pending patents worldwide. He has also co-authored numerous publications in high-impact scientific journals such as Nature, Cell, Nature Communication and Nature Medicine.
Vincent holds a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology of Lausanne (EPFL), where his scientific work combining neuro-physiological experiments with the modelling of neural circuits dynamics focused on the impact of electrical stimulation on neuroplasticity and neural circuits organization. He also holds a Master of Life Science and Engineering from EPFL.
Dr Jonas Zimmermann joined the Wyss Center in 2017 as staff neuroscientist. He facilitates pre-clinical studies of novel therapeutic methods and devices. He also has a keen interest in advanced neural data processing algorithms and supports various projects at the Wyss Center in this area.
Jonas earned his PhD from Newcastle University (UK), working on spinal cord stimulation to restore movement. He brings more than ten years of experience both with human and animal neuroscience working with technologies as diverse as fMRI, multielectrode array recordings, optogenetic and electrical stimulation, and EEG.
Silvia Marchesotti is a Research and Teaching Fellow in the laboratory of Prof. Anne-Lise Giraud at the University of Geneva, where she is currently leading projects aiming at developing Brain Computer interfaces for speech decoding using both non-invasive and invasive brain recordings. Her research interests focus on the use of BCI and transcranial electrical stimulation to better understand language disorders, such as dyslexia and aphasia, and propose experimental interventions to alleviate these conditions.
Silvia is a neuroengineer by training (University of Genova) and obtained a PhD in Robotics and Intelligent Systems at the EPFL in the laboratory of Prof. Olaf Blanke, on the cognitive mechanisms involved in operating a brain-computer interface.
Dr Martin Schuettler is CorTec's Chief Technology Officer and co-founder and has been working on research and development of novel active implants for diagnosis, therapy and rehabilitation, with a focus on neuro-prosthetics and neuromonitoring, for over 25 years.
Martin Schuettler graduated in electrical engineering in Braunschweig (Germany) and received his PhD for his work in the field of peripheral nerve cuff electrodes for fascicle selective stimulation of large arm nerve for restoration of grasp (Fraunhofer Institute IBMT, Germany). In 2003, he joined the Implanted Devices Group in London (England, Prof. N.de.N. Donaldson) as post-doc working on fibre-selective peripheral nerve recordings. In 2005, he became group leader in Freiburg (Germany) at the chair of Biomedical Microtechnology (Prof. T. Stieglitz), establishing a quality managements system (ISO 13485) for the local implant manufacturing cleanroom and developing a set of neurotechnological components and technologies. During his academic career, Dr Schuettler followed the invitation of Prof. G. Suaning to join the Australian Vision Prosthesis Group multiple times as a visiting research fellow. In 2010, he co-founded CorTec to transfer many of the technologies developed in the academic field to industry. In 2014, he became CTO at CorTec.
Dr Schuettler is Member of the IEEE and published more than 150 peer reviewed scientific conference and journal papers.
Nicolas Vachicouras holds a MSc and PhD degree in micro-electronics from EPFL. He has eight years of experience working in the field of neuroprosthetics. He was an R&D intern and consultant for Aleva Neuroprosthetics for five years. Nicolas holds a Certificate of Advanced Studies in the management of medtech ventures. Nicolas is a co-founder and CEO of Neurosoft Bioelectronics, a spin-off from the Laboratory of Soft Bioelectronics Interfaces (EPFL).
13:00 – 13:20 Intracranial Neuro Telemetry to Restore Communication in people with Locked-in Syndrome (INTRECOM) (Nick Ramsey / UMC Utrecht Brain Center)
13:20 – 13:40 Non-invasive BCI for the control of upper limbs (Gernot Müller-Putz / Graz University of Technology)
13:40 – 14:00 Brain-spine interfaces for motor restoration after spinal cord injury (Henri Lorach / EPFL)
14:00 – 14:20 ONWARD – Empowering movement (Vincent Delattre / Onward)
14:20 – 14:40 Coffee
14:40 – 15:00 Developing neurotechnology for communication (Jonas Zimmermann / Wyss Center)
15:00 – 15:20 Brain-computer interfaces for speech decoding (Silvia Marchesotti / University of Geneva)
15:20 – 15:40 CorTec Brain Interchange – An implantable bi-direction brain-computer interface and it’s future developments (Martin Schüttler / CorTec)
15:40 – 16:00 Soft and stretchable implantable electrodes to interface with the human brain (Nicolas Vachicouras / Neurosoft)
Apéro
The event is free to attend, but registration is needed for catering numbers.
If you have registered but are no longer able to attend, please let us know by sending an email to: info@wysscenter.ch.
Find us: Campus Biotech, Chemin des Mines 9, CH-1202, Geneva, Switzerland.
Accessibility: Campus Biotech is a fully accessible building with wheelchair access and facilities on all floors.