Going Cyberpunk 216
goingincirclez writes "Cnet has an article about the development of a "Neuro-chip". This can be implanted in the brain and is currently being researched for medical uses. The article makes a brief mention the composition of pictures on a computer based on signlas receieved from the brain. Couple this development with the information in this Wired article from last October, and I can't help but wonder how far we are from literally being able to record dreams and thoughts?" On a similar note there are stories about a temperature-sensing implantable microchip and a scientist who claims he can tell whether you've committed a crime.
The John Ashcroft implantable microchip (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The John Ashcroft implantable microchip (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The John Ashcroft implantable microchip (Score:4, Funny)
I've no problem with this so long as we screen all our elected representatives, judges, lawyers and police officers
That would be useless. Reptiles don't generate internal heat.
Re:The John Ashcroft implantable microchip (Score:2)
Imagine this idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Imagine that all you would have to do is hook a little matrix type needle in your head and you could compete based on pure reflexes and just how fast your brain can work, and not on a malfunctioning optical mouse.
Geez, when I think of it like that, there could be all sorts of implications for something like this from being a lie detector to measureing IQ.
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:1, Funny)
70
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:1)
w00t
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:5, Funny)
You know, the whole "Matrix-type needle" thing bugs me. It's so... clinical. I want a fuckin rock'n'roll guitar jack in my head a la the Shadowrun RPG. If you're going to plug your PC into your head the least you could do is make sure it's a fashion statement and not some kinda wimpy little pin interface.
I can see it now:
Dell jack - Comes in beige plastic and lasts about two weeks.
Toshiba jack - "It's not a jack, it's a mini-jack." For the mobile computing professional.
Sun jack - "We don't sell jacks." You need com.sun.java.io.jack installed on whatever other jack you have.
Sony jack - Comes with integrated DRM to fry you if you download MP3s to your brain.
VIA jack - Mini-ITX version implants the whole PC in your head.
IBM jack - It's square. And comes in clusters.
Apple jack - Mmmm yum. Comes in translucent tangerine, but doesn't actually do anything because all the connections are wireless.
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:5, Insightful)
I see this mainly as a way to have true input/output from a cybernetic prosthesis, allowing the fake leg to do real things. Maybe hardcore MMOG players (read: otaku) would get it as well so they could truly live in those environments and escape reality. Other than than....do people really want the privacy of their own thoughts violated? A mindreading device would crash and burn because everyone has their own secrets they don't want anyone else to know. Though black market industry might take over...consider the House of Blue Lights from Gibson's Burning Chrome. Or chips in two people's brains (one monitoring input and one controlling output) so that one of the people is basically experiencing and controlling the other body. I could see a lot of market for THAT for government, celebrities, and big business...want to go somewhere but you don't want to have to be followed by bodygards? Use a puppet body so no matter what happens to the body, you're still safe at home.
Regardless, this is more likely to become a black market technology. You can use it in too many unethical ways that would never be approved by law but still have both the $$ and desire to be done.
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:2)
unsightly USB port on the back of my skull
God Dammit Bob, your dangling again! Can't you get that fixed?
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:2)
*Student sits down in chair, plugs USB cord into jack on back of his head*
*Flashy lights*
"Hello class, today's lesson will be on..."
Think of the possibilities.... Or even better, send a porno STRAIGHT to the brain. Hell, a full adventure. Screw the holodeck, this is better.
There is no spoon...
Like the squid god or crud puppy? (Score:2)
Or chips in two people's brains (one monitoring input and one controlling output) so that one of the people is basically experiencing and controlling the other body. I could see a lot of market for THAT for government, celebrities, and big business...want to go somewhere but you don't want to have to be followed by bodygards? Use a puppet body so no matter what happens to the body, you're still safe at home.
Remote control of another person's body just seems...creepy. It would be a whole new way of "selling your body" that is probably worse than the current method (i.e. prostitution).
On the other hand, it would be the holy grail of women seeking a way to make men understand what childbirth is really like. ;)
Obsolescence (Score:2)
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:2)
I suggest you read Neal Stephenson's "Interface", co-written by Frederick George. It's about a politician running for president getting a brain implant after a stroke. I'm not telling any more
It's a good read which raises some issues that are not so far-fetched in regard of recent biochips development.
Sadly, it is also the book containing the largest amount of typos I've ever witnessed, almost one each page! It seems to be recurent with Stephenson's book; weird. Anybody else noticed this?
Cheers,
max
Re:Imagine this idea (Score:2, Funny)
I'd tend to think that would fall under the category of "if you could do that, you'd already be able to build a robot to do it."
Or or those who don't like to exercise, have the computer work out while you surf the web.
Now that I like the sound of!
For work: You can visualize nice models in space.
Ok, I'm thinking Cindy Crawford -- but then it's not so great with the space suit in the way.
What does that have to do with work, by the way?
if there is anything that Tom Cruise has taught me (Score:5, Funny)
5th Amendment (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2, Informative)
Not that I see this technology going to use in many other countries...
"We have eyewitnesses stating that the gunman was tall, white, with blonde hair."
"So what? This guy wants to run against me next year. I say he did it, and he must be put to death."
Re:5th Amendment (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure. Just like your right to refuse a breathalyzer test if pulled over by the cops. Except, of course, that if you exercise this right, the state is allowed to revoke your driving privileges effectively immediately. It won't take long before refusing to take the test will itself be taken as a confession.
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2, Interesting)
Not sure where you live, but here in Virginia refusing to take the test already IS a confession. Been that way for some time. Same thing in Maryland and DC.
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2)
Innocence is not.
Which is not to say that I don't think it won't be tried, but that the legal issues are significantly different and there is probably a prayer of the Supreme Court striking it down if someone is convicted solely because they refused to take the test.
Re:5th Amendment (Score:5, Informative)
"You do not have to say anything but it may harm your defence if you do not mention now, anything you later rely on in court. Anything you do say will be given in evidence."
We lost the "Right to Silence" in the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994. Under the new laws, although we are under no obligation to self-incriminate, the court can now make inferences as regards to silence under the following circumstances
1) Failure to mention a fact when questioned under caution before charge which is relied on in defence.
2) Failure on being charged with an offence or informed of likely prosecution, to mention a fact which it would have been reasonable to mention at the time.
3) Failure or refusal to account for objects, substances or marks found on your person, in or on your clothing or otherwise in your possession, in the place where you were arrested (if asked).
4) Failure or refusal after your arrest to account for your presence at a place at or about the time the offence is alleged to have been committed (if asked)
info from : Liberty UK [yourrights.org.uk]
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2)
Every once in a while I read something that reignites my admiration for those dead white guys who crafted the United States Constitution (and its Bill of Rights). There's no way this sort of right should be removable by a simple law. Now if only the modern successors to Jefferson, Hamilton, et al, had one-tenth the political vision and backbone...
UK: How to keep your right to silence. What to say (Score:2)
Keep this script in your head for when stoped by the police in the UK.
Police: I am arresting you for XYZ. You do not have to say anything but it may harm your defence if you do not mention now, anything you later rely on in court. Anything you do say will be given in evidence
You: Exactly what have I been stopped for and how serious is this?
Police: You are being arrested for XYZ, you will be taken to the station and XXXX, you could face YYYY, you are in deep shit sunshine. (they will try to make you nervous)
[Police will then start asking questions]
You: Based on what you have just told me and how serious this is, I belive I shouldn't say anything untill I have spoken to a lawyer
By saying this (getting the copper to say you are in trouble and its serious) and then saying you are sufficiently worried to need legal representation, the police/courts will have a VERY difficult task in being able in infer anything from your silence.
It'll give you a bit of time to see a lawyer and think up excuses!
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2)
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2)
Don't count on it. If it is possible to do, the state can compel you to do it. Don't think the Bill of Rights can protect you -- that's outdated thinking. We are in a new era now.
Re:5th Amendment (Score:2)
If you plead the 5th, the court and the jury are quite legally allowed to accept that as an admission of some form of guilt - hence why refusing to take a blood alchohol test is grounds for losing your license.
That is also why DA's will frequently give amnesty to a defendant - by saying "OK, nothing you say on matter X can be used against you" your 5th amendment rights no longer attach. So the government can say "OK, you can no longer take the fifth about what you and Joey did, since it cannot be used to incriminate YOU. If you fail to answer these questions, you will be found in contempt and locked up until you comply."
Re:5th Amendment (Score:4, Insightful)
No reading of minds yet (Score:5, Interesting)
So reading one's mind is still _far_ in the future. That said, it's still a very cool technology which will allow for more information on how the brain works, and hopefully some serious medical advances.
Re:No reading of minds yet (Score:5, Interesting)
Is there anyone else out there who sometimes when coding has the feeling:
Dammit... I have all that code in my brain, and now I have to type away hours on the keyboard to put it into my 'puter.
I really hoped that this feeling would finally be able to subside...
Re:No reading of minds yet (Score:2)
Mind Reading (as the term is commonly used), implies that the subject's actual, abstract thoughts are understood. This could possibly be more difficult than creating a self-aware AI.
Using some kind of neural-uplink to accelerate your data input speed is a drastically easier challenge- a foolish, wealthy person could even trying having one installed today (no guarantees of fitness or safety, though!)
Look at research like the CyberMonkey [mit.edu]. (It mentions a biochip as a less invasive, higher resolution way to perform the procedure)
A willing human could get a bundle of electrodes buried into his cortex, and plugged via a USB interface into your computer. Then, with a lot of practice against a program that gives visible feedback, the subject could learn to control the eletrodes enough to manuver a mouse or keyboard equivalent.
Any guesses as to how many of his existing muscular systems will be paralyzed by the tampering?
Re:No reading of minds yet (Score:2, Informative)
Secondly, there's the problem of spike sorting. There is, AFAIK, no fully automatic way to detect and sort spike trains from multiple-extracellular electrodes in real-time. (ie to be able to tell how many neurons are "talking" to any single electrode.)
Finally, the level of plasticity in the adult brain is an unknown quantity. Primate studies are suggestive, but there doesn't seem to be a consensus on how to best have a machine "talk" to the brain. Should we have the brain learn how to do it? Have the machine learn to do it? Some combination of these? What about for paralytics-- how do you train someone to use a very specific part of the brain. Remember that you're recording from at best a few hundred cells!
Probably surprisingly few if you have a good neurosurgeon. And if he is paralyzed to begin with it might not matter./joeyo
Most important use: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Most important use: (Score:3, Funny)
Man, I want me a tasp. The thought of sitting quietly in a corner of the Commons and remotely inducing orgasms in my fellow students fills me with sadistic glee.
Re:Most important use: (Score:2)
This reminds me of Shadowrun (Score:1, Insightful)
An upside... (Score:5, Interesting)
--G
Re:An upside... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:An upside... (Score:3, Interesting)
Next day during a break at work, you come across, in the dark fringe areas of the web, a very large prime number - suddenly your field of vision blacks out with a searing headache and the same thought-voice says, "I'm sorry, you were about to view a number which, when uncompressed, contains information that may be used to circumvent video copy protection, prohibited by federal law. I cannot allow that to happen Dave."
Re:An upside... (Score:2)
Re:An upside... (Score:5, Interesting)
-Ayn Rand "Atlas Shrugged"
Um... Has anyone NOT committed a crime? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Um... Has anyone NOT committed a crime? (Score:3, Informative)
With laws like the PATRIOT act and DMCA, I'd say they are going after that
I am a criminal ... (Score:2)
Imagine...! (Score:3, Insightful)
And as we all know, everything you can think of will be done! What can YOU think of?
*shudder*
If there is one lesson we can learn from history, it is that we dont learn from history ~ dont know whose quote
Re:Imagine...! (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, but that was Back in the Red [sadgeezer.com], by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor, wasn't it?
(Ah, the world loves a bastard!)
Imagine this in (what was) Palladium - (Score:3, Funny)
In the beginning was the THOUGHT (Score:5, Interesting)
What will make this take off is a thought-processor. An interface device that allows the computer to read your mind. The real challange will be in signal filtering; I don't want to speak for anyone else, but I think about a lot of random crap during the day. How to distinguish legitimate commands from my daydreaming about travel or movies or p0rn?
Whoever invents this will make Einstein look like a small time celebrity.
Re:In the beginning was the THOUGHT (Score:3, Interesting)
Voice, GUI are not good for it as they are interfaces designed for pre-existed I/O devices as hands, mouth, ears and eyes.
What would be a real improvement is some virtual-reality navigation interface. However, it won't substitute programmable sctable interface.
But look, if you smart enough then GUI is not enough for you on your today's PC - you run CLI with good shell (at least BASH, using a mix of Perl, Python and Tcl). For example, on GNOME you use nautilus and other GUI stuff for navigation, but you allways create your on scripts, batch files, menu items etc.
The more important question is: what scipting language to use in brain? I think that this time it should not be imperative language. I would prefer something more mathematical, like Haskell. Perhaps I would use Lisp for driver extensions on that chip. And I'd like to keep many of personal database records in Prolog.
Re:more than THOUGHT (Score:2)
And then have those memories read out in court.
"Defendant! Did you or did you not exceed the speed limit on July 1 last year?"
"No!"
"hmmm...your SuperSmartMedia chip says you did. Bailiff...take him away!"
Why a chip? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why a chip? (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, a piece of re-imprintable silicon would be an interesting concept. Something that sits just beneath the epidermal layer, and is "flashable", thus reprogrammable. That would be interesting.
Re:Why a chip? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Why a chip? (Score:3, Interesting)
Your SCSI controller is not too diff from what you had 5 or even 10 years ago. Why? B/c since the beginning it has been designed right.
Same thing here, once the neuro controller will be designed righ, you'll upgrade mostly your gateway software.
P.S. I wonder if the IP address of our brains will be IPv6, when will we need IPv8 ?
Re:Why a chip? (Score:2, Interesting)
But to avoid standard port and interfacing problems - how about complementing the imprintable sillicon idea(aboce posting) with some kind of broadband wireless system - thus eliminating plug in ports... 802.11b in my head. Of course given current safety concerns over mobile phones - it might be better to have the antennae implanted in your arm than annywhere near your head...
That also gives us a whole new paradigm of mobile communications - datavising! Cool - use your technology to contact your mates, send them images, text or just thoughts... Maybe even patch them to a real time feed. How long before we see something like Sensorium Movies? A long time maybe - but at least we acknowlegde the possibility now.
Re:Why a chip? (Score:2)
Like many such devices, a port requires an interface between two different kinds of signals, in this case a signal coming from the computer, and the signals that the neuron understands in the form of weak electrical currents (or chemicals) hitting the right spots in the neurons (to sum up my knowledge on THAT subject;).
This chip provides a form of that interface, in that it can detect neural activity (I doubt this chip can stimulate activity in the other direction). In a sense you're right in that there will be a progression in the development of these chips and their implementation/implantation in animals, and then humans (this is probably a textbook case of the value of animal research). The trick is really to provide some kind of interface that provides communication with the computer without damaging existing biological structures. It might take more than one implant in order to achieve holodeck-like full sensory immersion (although this is one of the few ways to believably achieve it).
I'm sure there would be the usual bandwidth issues and so on. Perhaps (as an earlier post suggested) a simple voice interface would be easier to implement. Then we could all experience schizophrenia. ;-)
[voice from nowhere interrupting sex]
"This is Bill Gates IVclone. You MUST INSTALL THIS CRITICAL WINDOWSISME SECURITY UPDATE NOW! YOU CAUGHT A V-MAIL INLOOK DISTRIBUTED VIRUS AND ARE FLOODPINGING OUR HEADQUARTERS!"
Ah, the wonderful world of the future. I can hardly wait. ;-)
Re:Why a chip? (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead of implanted chips or ports, just inject people with a trillion or so microscopic robots. Kinda like the idea of 'mites' from Stephenson's 'Diamond Age'.
Probably, these little suckers would be too small, to do more than one task, but for that one task they could be really adept and each one (or each hundred or so) could have it's own job. One batch could be 'go seek out the visual cortex neuron 148 and report back what it's doing' and other batchs would have other equally important tasks. Some for input, some for output, others for infrastructure, conceivably others for security, etc... The lot of them work together as a little P2P network passing short-range messages and eventually it all gets reported back to the central computer... which could then do all the nifty ass crap that you can imagine by being brain-linked to a computer. Infinite recall, knowledge, processing, simulations... you're in the matrix now.
The little critters wouldn't ever be obsolete cause you could replace them from time to time by getting a shot... there is a lot of redundancy, and (assuming you have the micro technology to make them in the first place) would be probably pretty damn cheap to make and use.
Lie detectors said the same thing 20 years ago (Score:2)
My guess is that in 20 years this chip will turn out to be a hoax tool that had people scentenced for nothing. I say drop it.
Success was scaring the guy into confessing (Score:2)
Track my cell phone [gadgeteer.org] in real time!
Hell Yeah! (Score:2)
No more sneaking away to watch my pr0n! =P
We are one step closer.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously though , as science gets better and better at capturing our thoughts and dreams the applications for such technology are limitless. Imagine playing a video game that could adapt to your thoughts.
"Grand Theft Auto 10: Drive any type of car you can think of."
uhm, sorry :) (Score:2)
Two questions... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Two questions... (Score:2)
1. Would you be willing to be a beta tester?
That would depend on what it could do. And it would depend on how many people died/went insane during tests before the beta
2. Would the answer to question One depend on the operating system in ran?
Yes. It would have to be open source if I should trust it. It may be developed as a cathedral instead of a bazaar but I would not trust it if I couldn't inspect it myself. If you hide it you have a reason to, and in this case that wouldn't be profit since the money could be made from the hardware
And how is this cyberpunk? (Score:3, Insightful)
A constant slapping (Score:2, Funny)
*SLAP*
YOU PIG!!!
*SLAP*
.
Thermometer? (Score:2)
Yeah, I saw one at Rite Aid just the other day. It's called a digital thermometer and you implant it for 30 seconds - lo and behold it tells you your body temperature. Why would physically (ie: surgically) implanting a device be of any greater benefit?
The Terminal Man (Score:2)
Master of Orion (Score:2)
No one understands the brain (Score:4, Informative)
If you read material on brain research, you'll quickly come to the realize that we have no idea at all how the brain works. The theories are widely varying and contradictory. The chip in this story is a hack, like shocking a dead frog and watching its muscles twitch. You can do it without any kind of clue, but going from there to a full understanding of things is a gargantuan leap.
Expensive, but... (Score:4, Funny)
Decisive (Score:2, Informative)
From a scientific perspective, we can definitively say that brain fingerprinting could have substantial benefits in identifying terrorists or in exonerating people accused of being terrorists," Farwell said"
Sounds like a definite maybe?
Rules after having brain-chip implanted..... (Score:4, Funny)
Rule 2: See Rule 1
Re:Rules after having brain-chip implanted..... (Score:2)
Never give your brain-node's IP to Slashdot!!!
The real-life equivalent, never work for a corporation.
The requests for meeting attendance, corporate emails, congratulating Julie for her baby or bob for bowling 100, followed by warnings of impending doom for the company if the CEO cannot get internet access to reach E-Bay, make a potential slashdotting look like a smoking break in comparision.
heh :) (Score:2)
A question (Score:3, Insightful)
This reminds a lot of 'Forbidden Planet' were an entire race of beings is wiped out by their own subconcious thoughts. Some things in the mind should stay in the mind.
Missing the point (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Missing the point (Score:2, Insightful)
Other than that you're stuck with on/off and basic items liek that.
I'm no expert but I play one on
One step at a time... (Score:4, Funny)
George (Score:2, Funny)
Sure, laugh now guys, while you can. (Score:4, Insightful)
And to answer the unspoken question: Can FPGA's be used in your brain? I say this: Get Real. Current FPGA technology has no possible application. Maybe in 5 or 10 years, when we have conquered the leakage problem, and have developed fuel cells that run on glucose. But I don't see it, since an ASIC dedicated to brain interface functions will be a far superior solution. FPGA's may evolve into a future computing fabric, so they may have useful applications in external hardware, but it will be a very distant descendent of FPGA's that are finally used for in-body implants.
Re:Sure, laugh now guys, while you can. (Score:2, Interesting)
I can see some scary things happening... (Score:2, Funny)
Mandate brain implants to close the analog hole (Score:3, Funny)
The MPAA did not return our calls prior to press time, but it is widely anticipated that the MPAA will also be creaming their jeans over this news.
I don't see how this could work against terrorists (Score:4, Insightful)
Clearly he can only tell whether you've *knowingly* committed a crime - your brain temperature doesn't change just because a new bill was signed into law without your knowledge.
Therefore it can't possibly work on people who believe that what they are doing is legal...or 'right'...or perhaps 'ordained by God'.
Hence, I find it hard to believe it would be much use against a majority of terrorists as he claims.
Crime detection would only PARTIALLY work (Score:2)
If one truly doesn't know they committed a crime (mental disability or lack of knowledge), then it wouldn't be detectable because there would be no telltale "guilt" signal. If you truly believed that you didn't commit a crime, it would also likely fail to detect a "guilt" signal signature either.
This would only really work reasonably well with people who KNOW they committed a crime and have some emotional guilt/fear reaction associated with the event. Otherwise, signals would be just background noise.
Just a thought... (Score:2)
There's some thought out there that our basic sentience may have its source all the way down to theoretical quantum effects in the structures of the brain. The tiny effects are then amplified into macroscopic results via chaos theory (butterfiles affecting the weather and all that). The macroscopic results are, of course, all the annoying, pig ignorant and stupid things people do every day.
This is sheer theory, but it is discussed in many places. There's a decent book on it: The Quantum Brain by Jeffrey Satinover. A controversial subject, but interesting. Not sure I buy it but I remain open minded.
Regardless of the source, these learning and adaptive processes inside our little brains are dense and difficult to fathom, but we might not have to *completely* understand them. If these chips can provide an interface that is at least in the general ballpark of what the brain wants to deal with, the adaptability of of our brains may rise to the occasion and optimize the link for us.
There may not be such a thing as a standard chip interface. Each one may have to be tuned and programmed for the individual user. People with highly adaptive brains may get a discount because the chip vendor doesn't have to do as much work. ;-)
If we can make this work, we can all be like John Doe over on Fox and have mountains of knowledge at our mental fingertips. Maybe that's a good thing.
Of course, the information is only as good as it is. [CLICHE]Garbage in produces garbage out.[/CLICHE] You could raise a group of people in isolation and download a complete alternate history to their infomation chips.
Then again many people today believe alternate versions of history through which they have actually *lived*, so we don't need chips to create legions of deluded ideologues. ;-) We seem to have that ability built into us. Maybe it's just quantum weirdness...
Not too bright a scientist? (Score:4, Insightful)
So the detail is blood in a clawfoot tub. Maybe you have a clawfoot tub? Maybe you watched a dozen different movies with blood/tub scenes. Maybe you have the same exact Teledyne Waterpic that the murder victim has hanging in his shower. You could recognize anything for any number of reasons. Not only that, but your memory changes over time. After 23 years that guy could have been imagining innocence scenarios for so long it looked to the scanner like he was innocent.
Sorry, I don't buy it at all.
No, I'm not nodding off.. (Score:3, Funny)
Monkeybrain Joysticks at Brown University (Score:2, Informative)
My former undergrad prof, Dr. John Donoghue at Brown University, is at the cutting edge of research into neural implantable interfaces.
Monkeys Demonstrate Thought-Controlled Computing [techextreme.com]
Monkeybrain Joysticks [arts4all.com] Excerpts:
A rhesus macaque monkey at a Brown University laboratory can move a cursor on a computer screen just by thinking about it - playing a pinball game in which every time a red target dot pops up, the monkey moves a cursor to meet the target quickly and accurately. The monkey plays the game mentally, controlling where it wants the cursor to go by thinking.
The primary research Nature article is Connecting cortex to machines: recent advances in brain interfaces [nature.com]
Cheers,
Joel
Way to overhype a strory... (Score:3, Insightful)
The Infineon chip doesn't connect to the brain. You put tiny slices of brain matter (neurons) in the chip (in a suspension inside the chip) and can then run current through those slices. No direct brain connection at all. And of course, those signals through the neurons on the chip can be recorded and put on screen...but no "recording of signals from the brain"...dunno where he even got that from. Must be on crack.
Still, it's a cool development; as the article says, we can now do better research over a longer period of time, for a better picture of how neurons work.
Please... (Score:3, Insightful)
Both of the articles discuss observing only electrical activity. While useful, it is analogous to an EKG, just a graph of currents that can tell us the heart rate yet gives us little functional info beyond that. It can't tell you what the blood pressure is, or what the quality or quantity of the blood components is. The devices described are only a little more invasive than a device already in use to diagnose certain brain abnormalities: the electroencephalograph (EEG). It may diagnose epilepsy and sometimes causes of dementia, can suggest the occasional tumor and can tell us a person is brain dead. That's about it. It certainly doesn't tell the world what you're thinking, your sexual preference, or your illicit file-sharing habits.
The article on brain fingerprinting makes clear (at least to me) that the machine is of the same concept as a lie-detector test, though perhaps more advanced and reliable. IMHO, the test is not self-incriminating any more than that damning fingerprint you accidentally left at the crime scene.
New Scientist on such chips (Score:2)
It was going through the problem of how your immune system attacks most neural implants and methods for getting around this. You end up with "fuzzy" implants that don't look anything like science fiction stories typically portray them. They are still having problems with electrical signals because of the fuzziness. Still it was a very interesting article and suggested that these things will work different than we may have expected.
Windows for your brain. (Score:2)
If you replace body parts more than five times you have to buy another brain unless you pirate a corporate brain. Microsoft owns your soul and that may change at any time at their option.
This is completely unrelated (Score:2)
Let us see... first of all the neurochip is based on technology developed in caltech 5-10 years ago. What does it do? It allows single (or a small number of) neurons to connect to the chip, so that their signals can be accurately measured. Now, everyone, remember how many neurons there are in the brain. Alright? Measuring a bunch of neurons does not help a lot really. It does not have anything to do with 'reading your mind'. Especially when the part of the mind that is being 'read' is only one part in a billion. So, why is the neurochip important? Because it allows to measure and send signals to neurons without using electrodes. In fact, instead of putting an electrode in the brain, you take a slice of the brain and put it in the chip. They used SLUG BRAINS, for gods sake. This is not an implantable chip! It is the reverse! It is about studying neurons in an isolated environment.
The temperature-reading implantable chip is basically just a digital thermometer with a radio! It is a device for animals! It is an implantable device, but does not have anything to do with the brain.
The guy that did the criminal analysis research used a very well known mechanism whereby there is a particular spike in activity whenever someone sees something that he recognizes. Again, this has nothing to do with implantable devices and especially nothing to do with temperature. It is a short-time-scale electric potential.
This story really really sucks. It presents three completely unrelated links that it somehow glues together. Get a grip!
Re:Increase brain usage? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Increase brain usage? (Score:2)
Or, how often have you seen a doctor say "The car crash has dammaged your wife's brain, but fortunately it's part of the brain that she dosen't use!"
In other words, this is a myth.
Re:Increase brain usage? (Score:2)
Re:record your dreams... (Score:2, Funny)
I'll pass on the ability to TiVo my nights sleep.
Re:GET SOME PRIORITIES (Score:2, Funny)
We DO have priorities. Implantable neurochips are WAAAAAAY cooler than space ships.