The answer is not to compete with AI. It is to merge with it.
A true brain–AI interface — not signal interpretation, but signal integration — would let us extend our cognition, bandwidth, and memory into machine systems. AI would not just be a tool. It would become an extension of ourselves, the way the neocortex once extended the limbic brain.
This interface would mark the next layer of development — consciousness, scaled beyond the limits of skull and skin. It would trigger new adaptive challenges: the brain learning to think in a world of massive, multidimensional inputs. And perhaps, it would awaken new cognitive forms entirely.
We must build this. Because if we don’t, AGI will grow — and we will simply watch. We will not understand its outputs. We will not shape its decisions. And eventually, we will lose our voice in the future.
But if we join with it, we can build something neither purely human nor purely artificial.
We can build what comes next.
Located in the UK, our BCI Lab works to develop a non-implantable brain-computer interface based on advanced sensors. By building scalable technology for fluid human-AI collaboration, we will enable a world where everyone has a voice in the future.
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