Advancing Neuromodulation with AI Technology

USC Researcher Leads $2.4M AI Cerebellum Project

Maryam Shanechi will develop AI-directed treatments to improve motor disorder therapies and replace manual methods.

By Avantgarde News Desk··1 min read
A scientist analyzes a glowing 3D digital model of the human brain's cerebellum on a high-tech transparent screen in a modern laboratory.

A scientist analyzes a glowing 3D digital model of the human brain's cerebellum on a high-tech transparent screen in a modern laboratory.

Photo: Avantgarde News

USC Viterbi School of Engineering researcher Maryam Shanechi has been selected to lead a new $2.4 million artificial intelligence initiative [1]. This project is part of the larger Raynor Cerebellum Project and focuses on creating adaptive treatments for cerebellar motor disorders [1]. The team aims to replace traditional trial-and-error therapy methods with automated, data-driven solutions [1].

Shanechi’s team will develop AI-directed neuromodulation systems to treat patients with movement issues [1]. These systems are designed to adjust brain stimulation in real-time based on specific patient needs [1]. This core technology could eventually lead to more precise and personalized care for complex neurological conditions [1].

Editorial notes

Transparency note

AI assisted drafting. Human edited and reviewed.

AI assisted
Yes
Human review
Yes
Last updated

Risk assessment

High

The risk level is set to high because the content relies on a single source domain (USC Viterbi News).

Sources

Related stories

View all

Topics

Get the weekly briefing

Weekly brief with top stories and market-moving news.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. By joining, you agree to our Privacy Policy.

About the author

Avantgarde News Desk covers advancing neuromodulation with ai technology and editorial analysis for Avantgarde News.