For most people, the loss of a sense such as sight is devastating, not only for intensifying vulnerability, but for undermining quality of life. While prostheses can be functionally useful, they can’t replace the sensory information such as texture, moisture, and density that our skin so easily conveys to our brains.

That’s why a first-of-kind optogenetic device from Northwestern University, near Chicago, offers so much hope. Roughly the size of a house key and thinner than a coin, the new wireless neuro-implant may eliminate the need for certain skull-sawing and -drilling surgeries through minimally invasive implantation beneath the scalp. Neuroscientists can apply the soft, flexible “neuro-key” to the surface of the skull where it beams neuron-activating light directly through the c…

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