Neuralink's Brain Implant Gives Miracles To Paralyzed Patients, Can Write Back After 20 Years

JAKARTA Neuralink gave its patients another miracle. This time, the neurotechnology company owned by Elon Musk succeeded in making patients who were paralyzed able to rewrite.

The patient is Audrey Crews. Audrey is known to have been paralyzed for two decades. However, after undergoing brain implants with Neuralink, Audrey can now write his name on the computer using only his mind.

This can be done thanks to the implant embedded in Audrey's head. This digital writing ability was revealed directly by Audrey via the X account, formerly known as Twitter, recently.

Audrey shared his writing for the first time on July 27, 2025. He used the Whiteboard application on Mac to write his own name. The writing looks messy, but can still be read well.

"I tried to write my name for the first time in 20 years. I'm trying to work on it," Audrey wrote via the NeuraNova9 account. This isn't the only capability that Audrey has revealed.

Neuralink's first female patient also received requests from other X users. She showed her doodle image results that were still messy and other simple shapes such as apples, cats, to trees and sun.

Audrey also explained how he can write with his brain. When uploading another image, Audrey said, "Imagine your index finger is the left-click and the cursor movement is your wrist" without having to do it physically. Like ordinary airing."

Audrey is the ninth patient to take part in the PREME Neuralink clinical trial and has just completed surgery to install his brain implant. The operation was carried out in the third week of July at the University of Miami Health Center.

"They drilled a hole in my skull and put 128 threads into my motor cortex," said Audrey. "Chip (which was implanted in my brain) is about the size of a 25-cent coin."

Basically, the brain-computer interface (BCI) embedded in Audrey's brain works by reading signals from the center of his brain movement. This signal is then translated into an accurate cursor movement so that Audrey can communicate with the computer.