
BrainControl provides a way for people with severe disabilities to communicate and interact with their environment. It uses brain-computer interface technology and bio-feedback to enable alternative communication. The platform includes BrainControl AAC with BCI AAC and Sensory AAC modes, a 'mental joystick' concept, and supports future home automation and robotics. It is positioned as assistive technology for medical and daily living applications, with prototypes such as a virtual keyboard, wheelchair control, and humanoid robot control. The system targets patients, caregivers, and healthcare providers and aims to scale across clinical settings.

BrainControl provides a way for people with severe disabilities to communicate and interact with their environment. It uses brain-computer interface technology and bio-feedback to enable alternative communication. The platform includes BrainControl AAC with BCI AAC and Sensory AAC modes, a 'mental joystick' concept, and supports future home automation and robotics. It is positioned as assistive technology for medical and daily living applications, with prototypes such as a virtual keyboard, wheelchair control, and humanoid robot control. The system targets patients, caregivers, and healthcare providers and aims to scale across clinical settings.
Founded: 2010
Headquarters: Siena, Toscana, Italy
Product: AI-powered brain–computer interface platform for assistive communication and biofeedback
Primary application: BCI-based augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) for severely disabled/locked-in users
Tech focus: BCI, AI, bio-feedback
Assistive technology for communication and environment/device control for people with severe physical disabilities.
2010
Biotechnology
Breed Reply backed BrainControl as one of three startups in its IoT incubator; Reply reported a combined investment across the three startups but did not disclose per-company amounts.
2950876
Total funding amount record with date from company snapshot data.