Brain Controlled Computing a Reality 299
pchernyakov writes "Cyberkinetics Neurotechnology Systems told attendees at the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation annual conference that a 25-year-old quadriplegic with wires run from 100 tiny sensors implanted in his brain and out to a computer can use his thoughts to control a computer well enough to operate a TV, open e-mail and play Pong with 70% accuracy."
What does Captain Pike think? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:5, Interesting)
I've long held that if someone were to come to me with the offer to wire up a fibre interface to my brain I would be one of the first in line to get wetware / hybrid / augmented computing / whatever installed in my head.
-nB
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:2)
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:5, Funny)
Is implantation really necessary? (Score:2)
Download only, no upload (Score:2)
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:4, Informative)
Next are immune reactions to foreign objects in the body. Coatings over the electrodes can help, but are not a guarantee.
Finally, these electrode arrays are pretty large. Technology can improve this, but imagine invasive brain surgery every time you need to upgrade, or being stuck with the 1st generation mind-link ipod for life.
I'm waiting for nanomachines to solve many of these problems. When (and if) I make it to grad school perhaps they'll have it set for me... or maybe I'll volunteer as I'm never going to fly a jet.
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:2, Insightful)
Early adoption = not the plan (Score:5, Insightful)
There are always some wrinkles to be worked out of the first generation of any new technology.
Getting the latest generation of graphics card and finding that it somehow interferes with playback of my old
Getting the latest generation of cyberware and finding that it causes epileptic seizures in combination with the interference with my cordless phone? Rather more than a nuisance.
All things considered, I'll let the parapelegics handle the alpha testing for all this stuff, thank you very much.
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:2)
Like this! [about.com]
Re:What does Captain Pike think? (Score:2)
My first thought... "so that's how you spell 'quadriplegic'."
Quite scary that I am learning to spell on Slashdot! (it IS spelled right!)
Now, according to today's news [google.com], there won't be any quadriplegics, if we put the Johns in the oval office.
Hmm... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
While we appreciate your interest in tinfoil hats to combat our new technology, we advise you not to try it. As indicated, this is hard-wired directly into your brain. Tinfoil hats have proven to be a problem for our mind control rays, since they are wireless, however the tinfoil has proven to be no match for a Makita to the frontal lobe.
In closing, we recommend that you drop these silly ideas that tin or even aluminum foil will be any match for our hard-wired technology. Thank you.
Your Future Thought Control Overlords
I, for one (Score:3, Funny)
Finally... (Score:5, Funny)
Porn (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Porn (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Porn (Score:2)
Some of the easiest commands to implement will be to scroll a webpage, move the cursor, click the link, and then possibly implement some basic browser functions such as opening a new tab, going forward, or going backwards.
The INSTANT they make a plugin that can do this, I guarantee everybody with
Re:Porn (Score:2)
Wire it up to a dog or something, and I'm sure you'd not exactly like what you'd be seeing
On the other hand, if you do... I pity the people you live with.
yeah (Score:3, Funny)
ahhhhh, watching the karma burn
Re:Porn (Score:2)
I'd much rather NOT think of a Slashdotter doing that. But I understand some people are into that sort of thing...
Re:Porn (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, you can.
It's called sex.
Put the keyboard and mouse down, back away from the computer...
Re:Porn (Score:2)
Yeah!
No, can't think of any...
Great! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Great! (Score:2)
Best case scenario: Soon your neighbourhood will be watched over by friendly Robocops. [imdb.com]
Worst case scenario: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0097138/ [imdb.com]
Really? (Score:4, Funny)
Damn, I can't even play Pong with 70% accuracy.
Now just hook it up to some robotics and... (Score:5, Funny)
Birth of Cybornetics... (Score:5, Interesting)
Quite possibly even an eventual route to the elusive "fountain of youth" once machines can be manufactured to mimic human bodies. Because if you think of it- a human body is nothing more than a fantasticaly complex machine.
Re:Birth of Cybornetics... (Score:2)
Re:Birth of Cybornetics... (Score:2, Insightful)
In fact, if you really think about it, the most important problem associated with aging is not the loss of physical faculties. I'd say we've got most of the physical [as opposed to mental] diseases more or less beat, if you project from life expectancy and health data, within the next few decades, humans [at least in the developed world] will routinely cross 100-120 yrs in a physically fit state.
Neural degene
Re:Birth of Cybornetics... (Score:3, Informative)
That's not strictly speaking true - while it was long held that the neurons you have at twenty are all you are going to get, it's been discovered that we do in fact continue to grow more neurons over time. At least, in some parts of the brain. Whether or not neurogenesis occurs in the neocortex of adult primate brains is still a matter of dispute.
Still in the end, it appears to be a losing battle.
In the meantime, if y
Re:Birth of Cybornetics... (Score:2)
Actualy, I believe the "Cyberpunk" genre had it right, no matter how cliché and despised the term "cyberpunk" may be. One day, we'll voluntarily swap human parts for bio-mechanical ones. We'll crave these higher quality eyes, the stronger arms, the faster legs and the more reliabl
Re:Now just hook it up to some robotics and... (Score:2)
The Headaches (Score:5, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How about.... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:How about.... (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How about.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How about.... (Score:2)
These people have enough on their mind without their wheelchair going berserk. And I would put at least 256 bit WEB encryption on the wireless connection as well, otherwise it may become a rogue access point (har har.)
Re: (Score:2)
Fiction to reality.. (Score:2)
Eventually this guy will go nuts and start commanding things to kill people
Re:Fiction to reality.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fiction to reality.. (Score:2)
telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: Connection refused
Uh-oh.
Re:Fiction to reality.. (Score:5, Funny)
we can just telnet to him if something goes wrong.
root@terminalman# killall -s SIGKILL braind
Original thought keyboard? (Score:2)
Re:Original thought keyboard? (Score:3, Informative)
Sweet! (Score:2)
I hope that isn't the "slippery slope" they're talking about not going down.
Re:Sweet! (Score:2)
Re:Sweet! (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, for any other organ, yes.
For the brain?
Sadly, although humans usually die of some other critical organ (ie, heart) failing, our brains still steadily deteriorate as we age.
By about age 150, we'd all have the mental capacity of broccoli. Now, you might think, "sure, 150 beats beats 80", but consider the bigger problem - Immortal 150+ year old broccoli-controlled mech suits running around your local farmers' market. Do we really want that, for a gain of a few extra years?
I think not.
yikes! (Score:5, Funny)
His first email? INCREASE THE SIZE OF YOUR PENIS! PLEASURE WOMEN!
sigh. kinda makes you wish that email had never even come around...
(Jordan, if you see this...GET BACK TO WORK! =]
Re:yikes! (Score:3, Funny)
Actually, I just installed BO2K on your machine.
Please stop wasting company time on Solitaire and Slashdot, then I'll get back to work.
--Jordan.
Re:yikes! (Score:2, Informative)
My childhood dream... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:My childhood dream... (Score:2)
The difficulty in keeping secrets or private thoughts would also be phenomenal. Imagine you're neuro-chatting with your girlfriend, and she asks "Does my new skirt make my ass look fat?" Immediately your brain thinks "Why, yes" and this is transmitted to your girlfriend before you can self-censor your thoughts.
I would never "plug in" to such a device because I don't have the mental control to avoid thinking a
Girlfriend's response... (Score:2)
Re:My childhood dream... (Score:2)
With my luck Emacs keystrokes will be so embedded in my psyche that by the time they do get something like this my thought patterns will look something like this:
M-x gnus m foo@bar.com C-n What's up?
On the plus side, Emacs makes a pretty good front end for all of my digital communicatons right now.
Long overdue use of technology (Score:5, Insightful)
One possible reason why such advances seem to take longer than for the pacific tectonic plate to move a mile is the hemlock cup with its swill of politics, corporate greed, litigation and religion. Between them, they throw up enough obstacles in the path of medical advancement - sometimes justifiable on ethical grounds - but mostly to advance to their own selfish power plays.
Makes one wonder though what the side-effects would be though - would the procedure be safe for someone like Stephen Hawkins? Would the hundreds of electrodes somehow kill something off making time travel impossible? (oh! wait - he already reneged on that ....). But seriously, some study into the invasiveness quotient of this would surely be welcome.
As a parting thought - is any one else surprised that Pong made it to the top 3 list of things to do?! whatever happened to pr0n!?
Obligatory sign-off - its futile - you will be assimilated.
Okay... (Score:2)
But how many degrees of freedom? (Score:5, Insightful)
The quote really sounds impressive the way they wrote it, but it seems like the patient is using only three degrees of freedom in their control.
Use the mind to make the paddle go up . . . use the mind to make the paddle go down . . .
Use the mind to make the channel go up . . . Use the mind to make the channel go down. Use the mind to switch to volume and repeat . . .
Use the mind to select next email . . . Use the mind to open the email . . . Use the mind to close the email.
I count three degrees of freedom . . . This is no different than the guy that was wired up to use his mind to scroll through and select letters to write emails. It sounds good when one says he can play pong, check email and and control a TV, but the truth is that I think that using the mind to control with three degrees of freedom has been done before. This just sounds better because they framed the control in terms of some common tasks.
Re:But how many degrees of freedom? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:But how many degrees of freedom? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yay for pseudo-science! (Score:2)
Re:RTFA PLEASE... (Score:5, Informative)
In fact if you had actually paid attention and thought about the article after reading it, it would be rather obvious that the quote
There are 100,000 neurons in a square millimeter of cortex. There are very precise codes in the neurons. The details matter."
Is referring to the details of neural patterns being picked up, not individual neurons. Just as the quote from the article implies, the devil is in the details.
Re:But how many degrees of freedom? (Score:2)
As someone else pointed out, the up/down combination is only one degree of freedom, so in this case we have two degrees of freedom with almost a half of a third ("dwelling on the cursor"?).
The six degrees of spacial freedom [mfs.com.au] (I'll skip the Kevin Bacon jokes) break down into the three translational degrees of freedom (u
What's the server address... (Score:2)
Really? (Score:2)
what makes the brain so powerful (Score:4, Interesting)
this is what makes the brain so powerful. it builds itself as needs be. The neurons that form pathways to move yrou hands, can just as easily learn to manage other body parts. I remember my sister who is a research scientist showing pictures of nuerons before and after trials. where they would paralyze a rat in a certain area then the rat woudl learn to walk with it's limited capacity. then looking on the nueeron pathways that formed in responce to learning the new task was incredible.
70% Pong Accuracy (Score:5, Funny)
I can do the first two easily enough, but he's got me beat on the 70% Pong rate...
The Matrix (Score:2)
I can't even image what kind of "thoughts" you'd have to think to get a mouse pointer to move. How do you learn to send the right signals?
Re:The Matrix (Score:3, Informative)
I'm using it right now. (Score:2)
I've instructed my wife.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Time for a raging mob (Score:2)
The subject is somewhat misleading... (Score:5, Insightful)
The big thing about this is that now they are working to take out the fingers and keyboard part, and make it "Brain to Computer."
Honestly, I see a few frightening issues, though. For example, I can walk up to my computer on a dry day, sit down, grab the mouse, and send a static shock through the USB port, effectively freezing the USB capability. Now, what happens if somebody is using this wonderful new technology, and gets a static shock straight to the brain? Or, for even more fun, if there is no isolation circuit in the input system, what happens if the power supply to the computer blows and applies a comfortable DC voltage directly to your brain?
The entire "In" part is what bugs me. "In his skull", "In his brain"... It makes it seem more exciting, but honestly, IMHO it opens up so many more possible problems. Just the fact that you need to get brain surgery to just START to use this thing is enough as it is. If it were non-invasive, I'd be a lot more impressed.
Computer Potatoes (Score:5, Insightful)
I worry about the opposite of this situation... People wired to control their computers that cease to use their muscles for anything else. You think couch potatoes are bad? Just imagine someone hard wired to the Net 24/7.
We already are at the point where we can give the blind 25 pixel vision. directly through the brain. Just wait until that increases to 1024 x 768, and you can bring in other, erm, sensations as well. Welcome to the new couch potato. They won't go anywhere!
Re:Computer Potatoes (Score:3, Interesting)
oh boy, I can improve my pong scores! (Score:2)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
--
Adapting Dasher (Score:2)
Pong! (Score:4, Funny)
Call me when he can play Doom with 99% accuracy and I will volunteer!
Ethics Question (Score:2, Interesting)
Personally, I don't see the ethical dilemma. Even if things progressed to the point of "improving" on the human body, does anyone see this as an ethical no-no? I'd like to hear your reasons.
Everything was going great until... (Score:4, Funny)
Atari did this 21 years ago with MindLink! (Score:2, Interesting)
http://www.atarihq.com/museum/2678/mindlink.html [atarihq.com]
Obligatory Gibson quote (Score:3, Funny)
Steven Hawkins (Score:2, Interesting)
Would be good to see the Mighty MC Hawking busting some moves from a Robotic Exo-Skeleton =)
Cybermodules (Score:2)
*remote System Shock 2 reference fo rthose unsure*
This has already been done - 5 yrs ago (Score:2, Informative)
If he plays with 70% accuracy... (Score:2)
Croquet (OS) Anyone? (Score:2)
Re:Applications of this technology (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Uh oh... (Score:2)
Now we're that much closer to having the Agent Smith virus be real!!!
For the Serious Factor...
It currently only deals with taking information out of the brain and using it as input. The information back into the barin is received by other senses (Visual, auditory, etc), ie, looking at the computer screen and seeing that you did, indeed, manage to open the email. We're not talking about pumping information directly through wires INTO your brain. Just getting information
Re:Human Computing (Score:2)
Re:Use thalamus in brain. (Score:2)
Re:Wikipedia (Score:2)
Exactly! All that information on the Internet reproduces sexually.
Re:Imagine.... (Score:2)
They have this. It's called "slashdot".