Light Helps Injured Mice Walk Again 92
Mantrid42 writes "Researchers have been able to affect the brains of lab mice using light. Working in a new field called Optogenetics (optical stimulation plus genetic engineering), scientists injected lab mice with genes that can stimulate or inhibit neural activity based on the color of the light they're exposed to, and can be targeted to infect only on certain cell types. Additionally, another gene has been added to make neurons glow green when firing, allowing two-way communication between a brain and a machine."
:O (Score:5, Funny)
Does that make them..... Optical Mice?
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and a +5 awesome
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-s_40rM_L0s&feature=player_embedded [youtube.com]
so sadly funny.
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Bravo - that was actually a good first post. :-)
Re::O (Score:5, Funny)
Awesome.
I was just sitting here, bored, opened a browser to take a look at slashdot to see if anything interesting had popped up since I last checked 10 minutes ago, and I see this story with only a few comments and figure, 7? Theres got to be something funny in there by now.
And here it is. Priceless, just freaking priceless.
Same here... (Score:1)
Only I was expecting somebody to say something like:
Re::O (Score:5, Funny)
They may be optical, but if you grab one and look underneath you might still find a ball or two.
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I guess you will find an average of one ball per mouse.
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Dont you mean frikin' lasers on their frikin' heads.
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And hey, they're wireless too!
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Wireless green optical mice
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If the injury was Burns, then you'd get
Wee, sleeket, cowran, tim'rous beastie
Side Effects (Score:2, Funny)
Retrofit (Score:2)
Additionally, another gene has been added to make neurons glow green when firing, allowing two-way communication between a brain and a machine."
I know that changes to genes generally have to go into the cells when they are growing, but I wonder if the mechanism which does this could be manually installed in the nervous system (so to speak) so that living organisms (me) could export their brain activity as pulses of green light.
Re:Retrofit (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Retrofit (Score:5, Informative)
Of course, adeno-type viruses (either a weakened or non-pathogenic strain is used) are not without risk, particularly if you're planning to use them to infect your brain- meningitis seems like it'd be a real concern here. Right now, viral vector gene therapy is at the level of being an early experimental treatment for conditions like cancers and inherited immunodeficiencies- making your thoughts produce light would be a very off-label use.
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If you'd bother to read the article you'd discover that's exactly what they're doing.
I recommend it, it's a good read.
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So scientists just invented the mouse version of Green Lantern?
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So they could be weak against some yellow cheeses?
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If what the mouse is seeing shows as a surface in the brain, then we have a green screen.
Would dreaming show as mouse cartoons?
What a neat idea (Score:3, Insightful)
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Are you suggesting creating some kind of mouse neuron ASIC?
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Makes sense (Score:1)
This puts a lot of sense into the phrase "he is a bright person". Literally when you do a lot of thinking, your brain will shine.
Re:Makes sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Not to rain on the parade, but electrical activity does not correlate with "intelligence". Otherwise all epileptics would be super-gifted during their fits...
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Perhaps they are. Unfortunately, we will never find out. :P
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It will make some pretty funky disco lights - and perhaps it could solve the mystery of the Deceased Salmon responds to portraits of people [newscientist.com]
So... (Score:1)
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This is getting into some scary territory...
It's a little disorienting at first, but after a few segfaults and cold boots you get used to it.
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...and just grit your teeth and think happy thoughts when your doctor approaches you with a USB stick.
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What's so frightening about a mind-machine interface? I've dreamed of breakthroughs like this most of my life!
To be able to replace parts of my body just as easily as I can swap out a part on a car or a computer, the power to build a better human... Just imagine if they could develop this effectively enough that you could literally link your mind to another, or to a machine, to the net! Both the practical applications and the philosophical implications are staggering.
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For anyone who read the article (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the DNI we've been waiting for... The surgeon pops open your skull, injects some strategic locations with some gene altering viruses and installs some flashing lights. Now you can do two-way communication with a computer. What you experience depends on which cells were modified, and what program you're running. With sufficient funding for targeted research, we could see this technology in new kinds of: cochlear implants for the deaf, vision implants for the blind, artificial limb control and feeling for amputees.. and the continued improvement of those technologies will eventually lead to full sensation virtual reality immersion for anyone who can afford it. And we haven't even gotten into the gritty details of what we can learn about the brain using this technology.. reverse engineering is so much easier when you can poke as well as peek.
Re:For anyone who read the article (Score:4, Funny)
Oh *please*
Your over-optimistic attitude completely misses something that every slashdotter knows: The machines will eventually take control of our bodies, become our overlords, and turn us into bionic batteries. Keeanu Reeves will then be forced to die in a desperate plea to save humanity... just as it should be.
Either that or super-intelligent mice will take over the world.
We don't have room for positive attitudes here.
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or intelligent conversation it seems.
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When a computer-generated life-form shows more emotions, you know it must be... Keanu Reeves. ^^
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The machines will eventually take control of our bodies, become our overlords, and turn us into bionic batteries. Keeanu Reeves will then be forced to die in a desperate plea to save humanity...
In fact, forget machines taking control of our bodies, becoming our overlords, and turning us into bionic batteries...
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"will"?
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Yeah, but only _after_ it's available for interactive porn.
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I think that moved was called 'The Matrix', I'll pass, the ending sucked.
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I think it would be a lot better to find a technology to bring fiberoptic strands to the proper locations in the brain, and to generate the light with an external module. Then it could be worn or not worn, upgraded without surgery, et cetera. I'm deathly afraid of having a computer implanted in my body that controls any of my senses to any degree, because of the potential for hacking.
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...aaaand we're in Clippy land...
"Hi - it seems you are thinking naughty thoughts of sexy ladies. Do you want me to..."
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Um, I'll wait until the "pop open your skull" part has been engineered away.
Really, there's no "just" about that process.
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Ya know, really there is. Neurosurgeons are doing it every day. People with epilepsy are being *cured*.
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It's the oldest surgical procedure in the world!
reading much harder than stimulating (Score:2, Interesting)
It's hard to walk around in the dark (Score:2)
when you're injured.
nooooo (Score:1)
READ THE FUCKING ARTICLE (Score:4, Informative)
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wow, you and I seem to be the only two who read it.
This is how bad Slashdot has gotten.
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http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/10/16/2345204
An interview on the piece above... interviewer is a bit daft but the researched speaks volumes.
http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/200910161
The
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Thanks for the heads up, amazing read.
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I read the article, it's very well written, and what an *amazing* breakthrough! It's interesting how many major scientific breakthroughs were also very clever plot devices in science fiction in the past few decades.
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O.o Robo-Mouse-Headcrab-Nazi-Zombies-who-are-also-vampires!!!! We need the help of the dolphins and their sponge shaped weapons!
Typo in TFA (Score:2)
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it's quite obvious.
Opti = optimum = best
gene = gene
ticks = blood sucking creatures
Clearly they're using genetic engineering to optimize the reproduction and destructive power of insects.
Of All the Meddling (Score:2)
The blind mice ran after the farmer's wife and got their tails cut off with a carving knife.
So we have mice that can see but can't run ... that is just the way things should be. What do they do? They get them running, and you know how this ends.
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The farmer won't dare cut off the tails of mice with frikkin lasers attached to their heads -- especially ill-tempered manic depressive mice!
It's only a matter of time... (Score:1)
This mouse cage is clean (Score:2)
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Oh, I dunno, maybe the part where surgery and advanced genetic manipulation is required to implant this technology in even a single brain?
Crosstalk in two way links? (Score:1)
A potential issue I didn't see addressed in the article - crosstalk. What happens when an outbound signal, neuronal activity triggering a light pulse, is produced at the same wavelength (color) as another is tweaked to "listen" for? Would the brain be able to compensate and filter out such signals, as this essentially creates a form of an artificial permanent link between the two? Or maybe this isn't an issue beyond, say a few hundred microns, because the energy of the outgoing photons is below the sensitiv
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That in interesting question. With the right tweaks, optimistically thinking, you might get optical communication between far away neurons to work. Wonder if it would be faster than the chemoelectronic one? Anyway, the first thing I'd try to do with such a brain-computer uplink would be to try and connect google to it.
At last (Score:1)
Christopher Reeve will finally be able to walk again. He should be good in the new remakes of several popular films, such as "The Night of the Living Dead".
Call me paranoid... (Score:1)