Brain/Machine Interfaces Approaching Usefulness 129
Gary writes with a link to a Wired article about a brain-machine interface that may eventually have practical purposes. Though right now it simply allows a user to move a train on a track by performing math in their head, someday it may result in more serious applications. "Honda, whose interface monitors the brain with an MRI machine like those used in hospitals, is keen to apply the interface to intelligent, next-generation automobiles. The technology could one day replace remote controls and keyboards and perhaps help disabled people operate electric wheelchairs, beds or artificial limbs. Initial uses would be helping people with paralyzing diseases communicate even after they have lost all control of their muscles. Since 2005, Hitachi has sold a device based on optical topography that monitors brain activity in paralyzed patients so they can answer simple questions - for example, by doing mental calculations to indicate 'yes' or thinking of nothing in particular to indicate 'no.'"
Very Cool (Score:4, Interesting)
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Let's try my new brain interface. (Score:1)
Damn...... didn't work
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I'm looking forward to being able to write simply by thinking, typing slows me down soooo much.
The best part is that it could solve the problem of people typing without thinking.
Sometimes the word I want isn't the word I think. (Score:2)
As for th
Captain Pike (Score:5, Funny)
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Even in the utopian future of Star Trek we still shaft our veterans.
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[Fry is in a Captain Pike-style life-support machine]
Captain Zapp Brannigan: Do you understand the charges?
Kif Kroker: One beep for yes, two beeps for no.
[Fry beeps once]
Captain Zapp Brannigan: Yes, so noted. Do you plead guilty?
[Fry beeps twice]
Captain Zapp Brannigan: Double yes. Guilty.
I want one (Score:4, Interesting)
Would increasing the use of your brain like this, to give commands, make you smarter in some way, as well?
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Personally, though, I'd find it more interesting to be able to communicate symbols to my computer, rather than letters. Programming would be a much more accessible task if people could actually think about the behaviors they wa
What happens when.... (Score:2)
Maybe I wouldn't have to though...
[Me thinking]:....
[Fembot]: Honey, i have a headache, maybe later.
[me]: doh
Hmm on second thought, maybe the future isnt so bright
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Yes, in that one niche area.
If you train it by doing long division in your head, for example, you would soon get very, very good at long division.
Which actually raises another interesting question - It sounds like the interface works only because doing a "hard" problem causes a significant localized increase in activity in some parts of the brain; As people used these over time, the "hardness" of
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I don't think so. What you are learning to do is not just the e.g. long division, but rather, exciting some specific, externally-identifiable brain process. With practice, you'd learn precisely the range of thoughts that will activate the brainreader. That would, in turn, make you better able to control precisely which kind of thoughts your brain is using. I f
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"You", I am sorry, no.
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I wouldn't be so sure about that. The reason why we can type and speak quickly is because we *don't* have to think about it, all the little details are happening unconsciously, they are stored in muscle memory and such. This thing isn't looking like it is going to read your thoughts anytime soon, instead it forces you to think about something totally unrelated to your real thought to trigger an output, which sounds like an awful ind
What a coincidence! (Score:5, Funny)
Scientist: "Ok now to turn left just start thinking about any kind of cheese."
*Patient starts spinning madly in a circle*
Scientist: "HEY! You're thinking about my WIFE you bastard!"
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It'll be interesting to see what happens when they start building interfaces that differentiate between different classes of thought, such as speech, motor activity, math and emotion. I predict those interfaces would require someone of a significant degree of mental self-control.
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Privacy of the paralysed (Score:3, Funny)
We need privacy laws for the damn device!
Cheers!
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divide by Zero.
Blood flow? (Score:2)
It seems to me that if we're trying to develop a mind-control mouse interface (or whatever), it would have significantly less lag if it could read electrical signals (like an EEG).
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Essentially you are correct. The blood flow changes in the brain are secondary to the electrical activity and occur at a d
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Bits per second limitation (Score:3, Interesting)
A principle limitation in brain-machine interfaces can be summed up by noting whether the current incarnation can provide more information that a monitor of a person's eye movements (a few bits per second).
This one will certainly fail that test, and fundamental limitations exist that will prevent its improvement, and those are based on the spatial and temporal resolution available by transcranial optical topography (or near-infrared as the case may be).
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Too many comic books... (Score:2)
The first thing that I thought of was, "man, that's a super-villain just WAITING to happen."
Hello, Brainiac.
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What if you are bad at math? (Score:5, Funny)
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Ironically enough the problem was:
If a train leaves chicago at 10:30 AM (Central time) heading westbound at 55 mph and a train leaves Las Vegas at 11:25 AM (Mountain time) eastbound at 115 kph on the same track, where will they collide?
The answer of course (relative to the engineer) was "here".
Great idea for cars (Score:2)
I'd go a step further (Score:2)
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(i know, i know mom... Never bite the remote...)
What worries me... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:What worries me... (Score:4, Interesting)
Short answer is that a sufficiently sophisticated device could tell the difference.
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Well obviously the brain is capable of doing it, so i'm assuming there must be a way of differentiating the two by monitoring the brain closely enough. That might require more refining of this technology though, so until then you'll just have to stop thinking about sex all the time.
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[John]
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The question about this sort of interface, though, is how we differentiate between an intentional thought and the sort of fleeting "What if..? No
Let the brain loose!!? (Score:1)
What if you just think about ramming the car that just cut you off?
Good times.
Feedback (Score:3, Interesting)
Neural input is harder than neural output (eg. through MRI monitoring). But even a little direct neural input will be used by the brain to vastly improve the brain's control of the machines.
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Hmmmmm (Score:2)
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It's optical _tomography_, not optical topography (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's optical _tomography_, not optical topograp (Score:2)
http://www.hitachi-medical.co.jp/info/opt-e/index
They are both valid terms, really.
I'll only let them plug me in if. . . (Score:2)
Brain to Machine interface (Score:3, Funny)
Doesn't anyone remember Forbidden Planet? (Score:2, Funny)
You start building these machines, and the next thing you know, armies of robots tasked to do our bidding will wind up ripping the clothes off the most attractive people. Fortunately, our arms race of fat has prepared us for this.
Time to crack open a bag of Cheetos, before it is too late!
Tagged with 'borg' (Score:2)
Damn the man.
Cool! (Score:5, Funny)
Mod Parent up! (Score:2)
Security Nightmare. (Score:1)
Scary (Score:2)
"this is an unauthorized thought process"
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106950/ [imdb.com]
Mental commands? (Score:2)
I wouldn't mind bringing Firefox to bare in Russian.
More an art than a science... (Score:2)
Of course, reading a brain in many ways would be functionally equivalent to writing to it, so we'd have to find a non-destructive way somehow, or at least a way that is minimally invasive and even in reading all content that is accessed. With this cur
Is it too late for Stephen Hawking, though? (Score:1)
Current gen consoles, a retrospective. (Score:3, Funny)
Stand by for "The Genesis Machine" (Score:2)
Very cool.
Organians (Score:2)
[John]
Eventually (Score:1)
This is good news, and I look forward to further developments.
Eddie
I'm tired of phony brain interface advances (Score:2, Insightful)
Also. WTF? The person does math and the computer moves a train? That is totally backwards from the way it should be.
Thought controlled interfaces (Score:2)
More seriously, at the moment this looks like tapping a Morse code key with a bucket of water. We're making great strides with finer-grained input devices, but this really isn't much of an output interface. Makes me think of the science fiction story, "Faces", author forgotten. I also recently read about grafting new senses onto people. The nifty one I like was directional sense. They added a stri
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Brain/Machine Interface? (Score:1)
Hmmm (Score:1)
brain control is not new, but is it now cheap? (Score:1)
>help disabled people operate electric wheelchairs, beds or artificial limbs.
Companies such as Cyberlink, http://www.brainfingers.com/ [brainfingers.com] have products that do this for years. I know, because one of the beta testers of my software eLocutor (that allows you to type with one button, http://holisticit.com/eLocutor/elocutorv3.htm [holisticit.com]) was an ALS patient who used it to communicate. The thing costs about US$ 2000, which is rather steep.
Re:The real impact (Score:4, Funny)
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[We don't need the PATRIOT Act, we need to act like patriots.]
Nope: (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course, the military
Re:Nope: (Score:4, Funny)
Two pilots flying along.
One asks the other "So, how long have you been married now?"
The other responds "Lemme see, we got married in '98, so..."
Whoosh.
"Crap."
"What?"
"I think I just bombed New Jersey."
Re:Nope: (Score:4, Funny)
That does it - we must rush this into production ASAP!
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I do not think so (Score:3, Insightful)
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Hacking of course is going to be a problem, but what happens when you lose communication with the craft? Will they be programmed to continue their mission, maintain a flight patter what? Nothing can be good because it's like the driver falling asleep for a bit.
But it is a cool idea though, it'd be bad ass to be able to talk to people by
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"How did you die?"
"Umm,... I was looking at porn through my new cybernetic internet interface when it malfunctioned and overloaded my brain stem."
"You go straight to hell!"
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Later..
Satan:"How did you die?"
Me:"Like I told the other guy, I was looking at porn through my new cybernetic internet interface when it malfunctioned and overloaded my brain stem."
Satan:"Sweet!"
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Datajacks, skillsofts, smartgun systems, enhanced vision, interface for artificial muscle control, cerebral cortex bombs...
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What if you have very poor math skills; does the toy train derail?
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Re:One day (Score:5, Insightful)
You miss the point (Score:1)