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This tiny implant, smaller than a grain of salt, can read your brain

Date:
March 24, 2026
Source:
Cornell University
Summary:
A new neural implant is so small it can rest on a grain of salt, yet it can track and wirelessly transmit brain activity for over a year. It’s powered by laser light that safely passes through tissue and communicates using tiny infrared signals. This ultra-miniature device could transform how scientists study the brain without invasive wiring.
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Researchers at Cornell University, working with collaborators, have created an extremely small neural implant that can sit on a grain of salt. Despite its size, the device can wirelessly transmit brain activity data from a living animal for more than a year.

The advance, reported in Nature Electronics, shows that microelectronic systems can operate at a remarkably small scale. This could open the door to new approaches in brain monitoring, bio-integrated sensors, and other medical and technological uses.

What Is the MOTE Device

The device is known as a microscale optoelectronic tetherless electrode, or MOTE. Its development was led by Alyosha Molnar, a professor in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Cornell, along with Sunwoo Lee, an assistant professor at Nanyang Technological University. Lee began working on the technology earlier as a postdoctoral researcher in Molnar's lab.

How the Implant Uses Light to Transmit Brain Signals

The MOTE operates using red and infrared laser beams that safely pass through brain tissue. It sends data back by emitting tiny pulses of infrared light that encode electrical signals from the brain.

At the core of the device is a semiconductor diode made from aluminum gallium arsenide. This component captures incoming light to power the system and also emits light to transmit data. The implant also includes a low-noise amplifier and an optical encoder, both built with the same type of semiconductor technology used in everyday microchips.

The device measures about 300 microns in length and 70 microns in width.

"As far as we know, this is the smallest neural implant that will measure electrical activity in the brain and then report it out wirelessly," Molnar said. "By using pulse position modulation for the code -- the same code used in optical communications for satellites, for example -- we can use very, very little power to communicate and still successfully get the data back out optically."

Future Applications for Brain and Body Monitoring

According to Molnar, the materials used in the MOTE could allow researchers to record brain activity during MRI scans, something that is largely not possible with current implants. The technology may also be adapted for other parts of the body, including the spinal cord, and could eventually be combined with future innovations such as opto-electronics embedded in artificial skull plates.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Cornell University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Sunwoo Lee, Shahaboddin Ghajari, Sanaz Sadeghi, Yumin Zheng, Hind Zahr, Alejandro J. Cortese, Wenchao Gu, Kibaek Choe, Aaron Mok, Melanie Wallace, Rui Jiao, Chunyan Wu, Jesse C. Werth, Weiru Fan, Praneeth Mogalipuvvu, Ju Uhn Park, Shitong Zhao, Conrad Smart, Thomas A. Cleland, Melissa R. Warden, Jan Lammerding, Tianyu Wang, Jesse H. Goldberg, Paul L. McEuen, Chris Xu, Alyosha C. Molnar. A subnanolitre tetherless optoelectronic microsystem for chronic neural recording in awake mice. Nature Electronics, 2025; 8 (12): 1259 DOI: 10.1038/s41928-025-01484-1

Cite This Page:

Cornell University. "This tiny implant, smaller than a grain of salt, can read your brain." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 24 March 2026. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/03/260324024249.htm>.
Cornell University. (2026, March 24). This tiny implant, smaller than a grain of salt, can read your brain. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 25, 2026 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/03/260324024249.htm
Cornell University. "This tiny implant, smaller than a grain of salt, can read your brain." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/03/260324024249.htm (accessed March 25, 2026).

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