Neuroscientists At MIT Developing DNI 126
coolphysco1010 wrote to discuss the possible development of a direct neural interface, ala 'The Matrix', that could eventually allow for instant object recognition. From the article: "Now, neuroscientists in the McGovern Institute at MIT have been able to decipher a part of the code involved in recognizing visual objects. Practically speaking, computer algorithms used in artificial vision systems might benefit from mimicking these newly uncovered codes ... In a fraction of a second, visual input about an object runs from the retina through increasingly higher levels of the visual stream, continuously reformatting the information until it reaches the highest purely visual level, the inferotemporal (IT) cortex. The IT cortex identifies and categorizes the object and sends that information to other brain regions."
Imagine the possibilities... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:1)
Well, it's a better ambition than "Thing" from the Addams Family, I suppose.
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:1)
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:1)
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:2)
Ignoring how depressing a Day in the Life of a Research monkey must be, I'm wondering why they wouldn't opt for something more stimulating [lhup.edu]?
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:1)
"Arghhhh!!!!"
Troll: "hehe, another
Re:Imagine the possibilities... (Score:1)
Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:1)
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:2)
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:3, Interesting)
"Be not the first by whom the new are tried -
No
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:1)
=\
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:3, Informative)
If
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:1)
Re:Sweet mother of brain implants. (Score:2)
Surprisingly, the implants for artifical hearing work very well: having the auditory nerve laid out, low frequency to high frequency, along the bony tube of the cochlea helps localize the current to just the nerves you want to hit with each electrode.
Does that work if the nerve has died?
Windows brain implants (Score:1)
Poor Monkeys (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Poor Monkeys (Score:1)
Considering that they've been injecting audio into our brains [google.com](yes, I have one of those too) for ages now I don't see that they have much choice but to finish developing the technologies.
Re:Poor Monkeys (Score:1)
I also find it interesting that they call it an ultrasonic neural stimulation instrument for brain entrainment(?) Was there some reason that they can't call it a hearing aid or artificial hearing? That would be the best way to sell it, so I can only
Re:Poor Monkeys (Score:1)
so NOT known ojbects and KNOWN objects has similarly patterns for neural signals in monkey brains for conclusions! SO find repeatables on nerual patterns is keys i htink on market producables.
Re:Poor Monkeys (Score:2)
Chair (Score:3, Funny)
Hole in the headrest preferable.
Re:Chair (Score:1)
It's about time! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's about time! (Score:2, Informative)
link [seeingwithsound.com]
other link [brown.edu]
But yes, with the technology presented in the article, I suppose one could even cure blinds that have a damaged visual cortex.
Re:It's about time! (Score:1)
Re:It's about time! (Score:5, Informative)
Every visual neuroscientist, ever, has been working on "deciphering part of the code involved in recognizing visual objects." Poggio and DiCarlo's contribution is mostly that they were able to record from a large number of neurons simultaneously in the inferotemporal cortex (IT). It's a logical (but interesting, to be sure) progression of work that has been done for decades in IT -- most of that work done elsewhere.
Neural prosthetics and DNI are the bullshit that people trot out to make neuroscience interesting to the public. It's worth pointing out that neither of the actual named scientists in this work raise the possibility, and in fact, other than the abstract, there's nothing that even hints at the idea. These guys aren't working on a DNI. They're doing basic science. Years, decades down the road, some engineers might take the work that built on Poggio and DiCarlo's work and turn it into a DNI. Or at least, we can so hope.
Name a university, and I can guarantee that the odds are that they'll have some basic science research underway with as much potential for the betterment of society as this stuff. So when you say "kudos to MIT" like this, remember that you're praising their PR department, not their scientists.
Re:It's about time! (Score:2)
Re:It's about time! (Score:1)
Matrix? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Matrix? (Score:2, Informative)
Well, actually the article focusses on intercepting the sensoric data and making sense of it. I believe scientists have for some time been able to make sense of the basic sensoric data; stuff like using a cat's eye to produce webcam quality images. This research seems directed at interpreting the signals at a much deeper level.
Though very interesting, it's still a one-way extraction process (ie. *not* synthesis) which is just completel
Re:Matrix? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Sigh. Loose is the opposite of tight. Lose is the opposite of win. What's so damn difficult about this?
Re:Matrix? (Score:3, Funny)
Looser is what grammar and spelling nazi's should be. Loser is what grammar and spelling nazi's are.
What's so damn bad about someone making a mistake so minor that anybody with an IQ higher than a banana can still understand?
;-)
Re:Matrix? (Score:2)
What's so damn bad about someone making a mistake so minor that anybody with an IQ higher than a banana can still understand?
It's jarring and shows a lack of care, that's what. If you can't be bothered to spell right, what does that say about the content of your words?
No 12 monkeys (Score:4, Informative)
Unfortunately this was so long ago I cannot remember the magazine or relocate the article. But googling artificial vision shows a few parts of history and HOWSTUFFWORKS has a full set of details
http://health.howstuffworks.com/artificial-vision
Re:No 12 monkeys (Score:3, Interesting)
The project was apparently quite successful, as the patient was able to move about the facility, pick up a phone from a desk, and even drive a car around the parking lot. Fairly low-res input, but enough to see s
Re:No 12 monkeys (Score:4, Informative)
The article, as well as the feasibility of Dr. Dobelle's (who has died in 2004) research, are sketchy at best. Apply truckload of salt.
Fabulous (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fabulous (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Fabulous (Score:1)
And there's nothing as under-rated as a good dump.
Just recordings (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just recordings (Score:3, Insightful)
Important to remember that these mon
Re:Just recordings (Score:5, Informative)
R. Quian Quiroga, L. Reddy, G. Kreiman, C. Koch & I. Fried Invariant visual representation by single neurons in the humanbrain. [caltech.edu] Nature (2005) 435, 1102-1107
It takes a fraction of a second to recognize a person or an object even when seen under strikingly different conditions. How such a robust, high-level representation is achieved by neurons in the human brain is still unclear. In monkeys, neurons in the upper stages of the ventral visual pathway respond to complex images such as faces and objects and show some degree of invariance to metric properties such as the stimulus size, position and viewing angle. We have previously shown that neurons in the human medial temporal lobe (MTL) fire selectively to images of faces, animals, objects or scenes. Here we report on a remarkable subset of MTL neurons that are selectively activated by strikingly different pictures of given individuals, landmarks or objects and in some cases even by letter strings with their names. These results suggest an invariant, sparse and explicit code, which might be important in the transformation of complex visual percepts into long-term and more abstract memories.
Nothing new here (Score:1)
That *is* an interesting result, since (computer) neural net research generally tends to favour a designs with a complete overkill in the number of neurons.
We have non-invasive signal injection technology (Score:3, Informative)
We already have something called transcranial magnetic stimulation. See:
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnum b er=1300793 [ieee.org]
http://groups.csail.mit.edu/vision/medical-vision/ surgery/tms.html [mit.edu] -- most relevant to discussion, has section on visual signal injection
http://www.biomag.hus.fi/tms/ [biomag.hus.fi]
http://www.mp.uni-tuebingen.de/mp/index.php?id=94 [uni-tuebingen.de]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcranial_magnetic _stimulation [wikipedia.org]
http://pni.unibe.ch/TMS.htm [unibe.ch]
Re:We have non-invasive signal injection technolog (Score:2)
Re:We have non-invasive signal injection technolog (Score:2)
Re:We have non-invasive signal injection technolog (Score:2)
Allergies... (Score:2)
Re:Allergies... (Score:1)
Re:Allergies... (Score:2)
from what I understand, in theory you can become allergic to basically anything at anytime without warning
You understand wrong. Medical implants are generally constructed of inert material that the body doesn't care about. I myself have a piece of titanium in my neck - it won't be causing a reaction anytime soon.
sorry to dash your hopes, but... (Score:5, Informative)
i am working on optical neuron-computer interfaces, and this is probably the most efficient and direct route for reading neurons. I know of researchers who can also stimulate neurons to fires via light, so in principle, we could build a complete neuroptical computers tomorrow... if neurons were not complete bastards to work with.
you see, they just dont like to stay place. where i research, they often build tiny fences to keep them in place, but even then, they go shooting theyre axons anywhere they feel, with no concern for the feelings of the researcher.
we also grow neurons on microchip surfaces, which allows for high speed and high resolution stimulation and reading of single neuron activity, but in two dimensions, which is excellent for retina etc.
but the neuron-chip or old fashioned neuron-electrode are hard to place, and optical reading of neurons still has bugs to sort out (id guess from 4-10 years more basic research). whenever you see these cool brainscan pics with MRI etc, remember theyre resolution is on the order of millimeters, and thats a lot of complexity lost.
http://www.biochem.mpg.de/mnphys/ [biochem.mpg.de] has a nice review of the problems involved, if you like hardcore solidstate chemistry, silicon physics, and neurobiology
Re:sorry to dash your hopes, but... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:sorry to dash your hopes, but... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:sorry to dash your hopes, but... (Score:1)
Re:sorry to dash your hopes, but... (Score:2)
alternatives (Score:1)
http://yoda.seas.upenn.edu/boahen/ [upenn.edu]
Re:sorry to dash your hopes, but... (Score:1)
OMFG (Score:3, Funny)
Re:OMFG (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:OMFG (Score:2)
Then I remembered my college days. (It's early this morning...)
Re:OMFG (Score:2)
should be a lot of brain articles... (Score:1)
Vision has been done for a long time (Score:2)
now at the time they were just doing a few blobs intended to help the blind.
This looks like it is moving a bit further up the chain a bit which should be interesting;
in the end it is just vision however.
What if... (Score:3, Interesting)
Cyborg possibilities (Score:2)
This kind of stuff both excites and scares me. Whenever I hear about electronics/brain interaction (like the story about monkeys moving robotic arms using their brains [bbc.co.uk]), I think of the cyborg possibilities. The most interesting one to me is the ability to supplement your own faulty memory with a hard drive and your
Re:Cyborg possibilities (Score:1)
- Sonar-vision, i think seeing in 3D would help us understand the world better.
- Telepathy, if you get the input/output working and hook up and antenna, watch out for spam though.
- Computer aided augmentation, help the brain with functions it's not very good at like calculating large numbers.
- Image streaming from your eyes, photography, movies like in one of William Gibson's books, i think it was Monal Lisa Overdrive, you wouldn't need to be an artist to recreate an image you have
Re:Cyborg possibilities (Score:1)
Please explain how you would uninstall the SonyBMG DRM root kit then!
Re:Cyborg possibilities (Score:2)
Re:Cyborg possibilities (Score:3, Interesting)
Not to go all Trinity on you, but why limit it to your own experiences? Bas
Re:Cyborg possibilities (Score:2)
I wonder if you'd be able to tell your own conclusions from what was being fed to you?
Given the number of people today who can't do this, I fail to see your point.
Re:What if... (Score:2, Insightful)
Jeez.
feedback loop? (Score:1)
Re:feedback loop? (Score:3, Funny)
Or more likely just Bender: "We're boned!"
15 years ago (Score:2)
I hope Sony doesn't get a hold of this. (Score:1)
Not really `"ALA the Matrix"'... (Score:2)
Disclaimer: I am currently drunk, so the following comments may seem a little more disjointed than usual.
I remember when I was playing Shadowrun, and delved into Cyberpunk 2020, and loving the idea of having a character who could directly interface to a computer - in Shadowrun it was via a "datajack", located directly behind the ear and mounted in the hard skull tissue for maximum anchorage.
The idea is not new. I remember reading about a guy called "Jerry" who'd had a special series of wires - I th
Boon for Camouflage (Score:2, Interesting)
Code Talkers (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Code Talkers (Score:2)
Anybody who wants to drill a hole in my skull. . . (Score:2)
The world is already a giant hologram where you can do or undo whatever you feel like.
Plugging your head into an artificial world is like wanting to play space-invaders on a simulated computer interface inside a game of Quake. No thank-you. We already have the perfect interface out here where the graphics and sound are of the highest quality and there is no chumpy, 'Save' button to make things boring. And there are plenty of cheats keys in the structure of reality if you have the courage
Many journeys (Score:2)
Dumbest love story ever. Boy falls in love with girl, girl kisses boy, girl randomly dies.
Hm. I had that happen as well, and I'm honestly not kidding.
So. . , how random is it that we should be discussing unfair, random events using that point as the example?
'Random' is an illusion. --And high drama and pain are useful learning tools for advancing souls. The desire to seek solidity and stability in an
MIT still behind the times (Score:1, Insightful)
Seriously. Don't exacerbate the inflated delusions of these guys by pretending that their research is unique or "cutting-edge". Expect more of them.
it's not DNI at all (Score:2, Informative)
Why the Matrix? (Score:1)
Book Flashback... (Score:2)
dated information (Score:1)
This translates to a cortical probe(maybe sub
Audio Object Recognition (Score:1)
In the short term, I suspect there would be more immediate applications for voice recognition than for visual object recognition, though I am still pulling for these guys if it leads to cars driving themselves.
Re:Audio Object Recognition (Score:2)
I'm currently doing similar work... (Score:2, Interesting)
Considering the progress we've made in distinguishing cognitive states (is this person looking at a face, a house, a squirrel, etc?) in human subjects using fMRI (an extremely noisy da
No, the cat does not "got my tongue." (Score:1)
Well, if nothing else (Score:2)
Weasel Words (Score:2)
"could eventually allow"
"computer algorithms"
A computer connot possible process information the way the brain does.
Any DNI is a transducer and traanslator because the two things operate very differently. Why the hell try to copy how the brain does it on a machine that can't? Try to improve on the process by making the computer do what it does best instead.
Object recognition via similarlity calculation has been available in holographic storage devices. It is inherent in their operation