One natural partner for the BCI application would likely be TUM in Munich, which aims to be the leading star of brain-computer interfaces in Europe by 2030: “By 2030, we aim to establish the leading European hub for brain-computer interfaces - in research, clinical application, and industrial translation”. Brainlab is conveniently based in Munich, and according to the attached LinkedIn post, “Brainlab brings the precision that is essential for the safe implantation of BCI systems”.
The topic of the presentation in the background seems to be the necessity of nTMS for BCI implantation. One might assume that the matter would be expressed that way on Brainlab’s slides, but the TUM Klinikum logo is visible in the top right corner.
And here is this morning’s Nexstim article; the technology is certainly appreciated:
A highlight regarding the Japanese market: Expanding into the Japanese market has long been a dream for us, and we are now moving towards regulatory approval with a budget allocated for 2026. This is a multi-year project, but we want to bring the best Finnish medical technology to help the Japanese people.
Extremely good summary, I was digging all over the web for information on this and you managed to get all the most relevant info into one post. It’s on my watchlist.