Enhance neural signal quality by removing interference and noise rather than amplifying signal, following Laozi's principle of achieving more through less.
Laozi repeatedly emphasized that adding more often degrades what is essential: more words obscure meaning, more rules encourage rebellion, more law creates criminals. This principle applies powerfully to neural signal processing in BCIs. Rather than amplifying weak signals (which also amplifies noise), advanced approaches focus on removing interference: electromagnetic noise, muscle artifacts, neural activity unrelated to intended control. By subtracting what obscures the signal rather than boosting what remains, engineers achieve clearer interpretation of true neural intent. This represents a fundamental philosophical shift: purity through subtraction rather than amplification through addition. Clinically, users experience faster, more accurate control with reduced training time. The principle extends to electrode placement and hardware: fewer, better-positioned sensors often outperform dense electrode arrays because they reduce noise sources and computational complexity. This Taoist approach of achieving more power through elegant restraint transforms BCI performance and user experience.
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