UW Researchers Demonstrate First Direct Communication Between Human Brains 154
An anonymous reader writes "Opening a fascinating set of ethical and legal issues, researchers at UW Seattle have demonstrated the first device to allow direct communication between two humans' brains. Effectively, they allowed a subject to play a video game with another subject's fingers. For now, the communication is uni-directional, though they intend to extend it to bi-directional. EEG sensors are attached to a subject's motor cortex to detect 'motor imagery' — imagined hand movement, in this case. That activity is translated and sent over a computer network where it triggers a Transcranial Magnetic Stimulator (TMS) located over Subject 2's motor cortex. Effectively, Subject 1 imagines moving their hand, and Subject 2's hand moved."
Let's just cover the basics here real quick... (Score:3, Funny)
...bring on the Kaiju, ultimate dutch rudder, we need a young priest and an old priest... ...did I miss any obvious ones?
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You forgot the most obvious one: Vulcan mind meld!
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"Inception. Is it possible?"
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If you use the left hand it feels like a stranger is doing it.
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This brings an entirely new meaning to the term.
Re:Let's just cover the basics here real quick... (Score:5, Funny)
Mein Furher! I can walk!
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...did I miss any obvious ones
Giant Smurf Ponytails?
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Brings a whole new meaning... (Score:5, Funny)
to the "Stop Hitting Yourself" game.
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I'm so disappointed, this was not first used on the researcher's girlfriend to give himself a better handjob :)
I saw that movie! (Score:3, Funny)
there was a rat under a chef's hat, right?
Imagine the future (Score:4, Funny)
move that hand, move it! (Score:3)
Subject 1 imagines moving their hand, and Subject 2's hand moved.
I think I saw this premise in an adult movie once
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You forgot Step 1, sit on your hand long enough that it falls asleep and feels like someone else's...
Then when it's controlled by someone else, it's even more convincing.
Next Time... (Score:2)
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I'm using it as my offences, as in getting the judge to strangle themselves and the bailiff to shoot the jurors.
.
Just Thinking About Science Triggers Moral Behavio (Score:2)
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The first thing I thought, "what could possibly go wrong?"
This is so great (Score:1)
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Resistance is futile...........
Just wait... (Score:2)
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So you're saying buy stock in tin foil manufacturers?
Re:Not that impressive (Score:5, Insightful)
Person ignorant of the science and engineering uses his ignorance to declare it isn't impressive.
Learn to think.
Hint: It's as impressive as hell.
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Dude.
1. I have seen demonstrations of these brain disrupting magnets before. A guy puts it against specific parts of a person's skull and he gets a response. Typically disrupting or even enhancing certain brain function.
2. I have seen the sensors before. I think I saw someone control a wheel chair with nothing but one of those devices. Vastly more impressive then the above demonstration.
All they did was connect point 1 to point 2. The magnet was fixed in the portion of the skull that would get the desired r
Re:Not that impressive (Score:4, Insightful)
You know those magnets that can shut down a portion of your brain if you put the plate right against your skull?
This explains those people walking down the street wearing headphones.
Transitional (Score:1)
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulator -- Hmmmmm, I will wait a few more days.
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Those things are rather abuseable. Zap a person in the right place, and they'll come out quite convicted they just had a personal experience with God.
Re:Transitional (Score:4, Insightful)
A six pack, a bottle of Tequila and some mescaline works just as well. No wires.
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I just attempted to take the adjective form of 'conviction.' I'm not sure if that is a legitimate gramatical move or not.
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Yes, because the magnetic fields emitted by a cell phone are in any way comparable to those used by TMS...
Won't use it until my brain discloses it's source (Score:5, Interesting)
Have you considered the very real posibility that brain may not have proper mandatory authorization and intput verification and anyone with local access can say stop your heart?
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If you want to stop someone's heart there are much cheaper ways. However, this may be the first one that works over the internet.
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You've been watching (or thinking of) Brainstorm [imdb.com].
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Have you considered the very real posibility that brain may not have proper mandatory authorization and intput verification and anyone with local access can say stop your heart?
Now I have. I'm pretty sure that anyone with local access can't stop the heart. I've never heard of anyone being consciously able to stop their own heart or even temporarily stall it like one can hold ones breath.
If I were to guess I would say that the heart signal works on a hard-coded enough level to make it mentally impossible to stop.
Now, holding the breath for someone else could be a fun experiment.
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The assumption there is that these methods don't bypass whatever control we have against stopping our own heart. there is no reason that we would have evolved properly gated defense in depth type systems. think how open the early internet was, i would be the brain will be much more like that when we first start connecting them. And evolution isn't quick. we will have to build the security into the interface and hope your interface vendor is legit.
Oujia board (Score:3, Insightful)
Sally: Mom, Bobby is moving my hand, tell him to stop.
Bobby: I'm not moving it.
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Mom: don't make me make you slap yourselves!
combine this... (Score:3)
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Wouldn't that be the communication stones [wikia.com] from Stargate lore ?
Honestly Dear (Score:3)
I thought it was you, just trying out a new body!
Prerecorded impulses? (Score:5, Interesting)
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- I know Kung Fu!
- Show me!
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I know you're being funny, but I wonder... sure, you're telling the motor cortex to do something... but it's still doing it. I wonder if this "trains" it the same way as doing it voluntarily would.
It's only creepy if you speculate. (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, let's just speculate about all the ways this could be misused:
*-- Vending machines that make you reach into your pocket and pull out money whenever you pass by them.
*-- Rich handicapped people buying time on poor people's bodies.
*-- Rich people buying time on poor people's bodies, in order to do criminal things.
*-- Police officers with a 'lay down with your hands behind your back' raygun.
I'm sure I missed a few, any suggestions?
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Yes: Drive your car at 100mph into a palm tree in the middle of the night for no reason... oh wait...
Re:It's only creepy if you speculate. (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure I missed a few, any suggestions?
My wife could use this to make me wash the dishes.
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Well, she has to stand there staring at you, imagining herself doing all dishes, so I don't think she's going to save much effort here.
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I think for her it's more the principle of the matter.
You have a good understanding of the feminine mind. Years ago I built a toilet seat lowering mechanism out of an old hydraulic hinge. I would raise it to pee, and then just walk away. The toilet seat would lower on it's own over the next five minutes. I expected my wife to be happy about it, but instead she was upset. To her, the point was not that the toilet seat was lowered, but that *I* lowered it, as a conscious and deliberate act of love and commitment.
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That being said I feel that kind of logic is absolute crap and a bit whiny, but I've seen it enough in others of my gender that I easily recognize it. If 'us' (read: females) leaving the toilet seat down isn't inconvenient for 'you' (read: men) when you have to piss, then 'you' leaving it up isn't inconvenient to 'us'. {I.e. if that's the worst thing I have to deal wi
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Why does anyone need to put it up anyways? Is it really so damn hard to aim into the bowl and avoid the seat? If you hit the seat is it any worse than hitting the rim? Isn't it easier to clean off the seat than the rim?
As a man I've never once lifted the seat.
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Re:It's only creepy if you speculate. (Score:4, Insightful)
*-- Rich handicapped people buying time on poor people's bodies.
*-- Rich people buying time on poor people's bodies, in order to do criminal things.
They made a movie about that, except that it was "Rich people buying time on peoples bodies to do whatever the hell they wanted," and "Rich people buying time on death row inmate's bodies to make them kill each other."
Gamer [imdb.com]
It still has some major plot holes that need to be overlooked, but I thought it was a decent sci-fi action flic.
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Star Trek level technology pops up and this is where your mind goes first?
I'm thinking you're a sippy cup is half empty kind of guy.
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*-- Vending machines that make you reach into your pocket and pull out money whenever you pass by them.
Vending machine would need a huge magnetic field, to hit passersby a few feet away from it in that particular spot. Assuming it was able to target the magnetic field well enough not to simply illuminate everything in the targets brain at once (doubtful), then it will still destroy all of the targets credit cards, cell phones and anything else that might be invented to let you pay vending machines in the ne
Conspiracies (Score:1)
Good. After it turned out the government really was watching all of us, the conspiracists can have something new to play with :)
With further development ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Would this help people with locked-in syndrome? Would they be able to use someone else's hand to act? to communicate?
Which one of the two people would have to have Parkinson's to make the resulting hand movements irregular?
Etc., Etc.
-- hendrik
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I think this requires you to pick up signals from the originator's motor cortex. I don't know anything about the syndrome, so unless there is something to pick up you're not going to get anywhere.
That said there could be signals, and they just don't go anywhere or are not strong enough... in which case I bet you could get it to work.
The reverse might help too! By making the cortex do things, it does them, and consider brain plasticity...
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Next step (Score:1)
What about emotions or perhaps even thoughts?
Will it be possible?
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Or how about physical sensation? There's money in that.
This story has mutual masturbatory overtones (Score:2)
Couples in long distance relationships eagerly await the results.
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Without translating sight or touch, that could be really painful. If they can transfer touch sensations, well then - this is even more useful.
If the NSA does not already have this ... (Score:2)
... well, they sure do now.
Stupid scenario (Score:1)
FTFA: "Stocco said years from now the technology could be used, for example, by someone on the ground to help a flight attendant or passenger land an airplane if the pilot becomes incapacitated."
Or, you know, use fly-by-wire. A normal computer-to-computer interface is sufficient here, and already exists and is in widespread use.
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Pacific Rim (Score:2)
One step closer...
Mwahahahahahaha
What's next? (Score:1)
As with everything else on the internet... (Score:2)
...clearly, this has MAJOR applications for the porn industry.
Holy smokes.
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
...Computers hack into YOU!
Muscle memory (Score:1)
Could this be used by an expert to teach somebody something physical and reinforce their muscle memory? IE some physical skill like playing guitar could be taught - at least the physical practice part - by using this?
what about general physical therapy?
This sounds totally wicked.
So what are the ethical uses of this again? (Score:2)
For real, so much of this brain research stuff it scary as heck to me. Even the so called ethical uses seem pretty creepy.
There was another research piece where they could associate negative or positive emotions with memories artificially. Some genius though it might be a way to fight PTSD, except I think he kind of overlooked the possible side effect associating positive emotions with death and carnage.
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For real, so much of this brain research stuff it scary as heck to me. Even the so called ethical uses seem pretty creepy.
There was another research piece where they could associate negative or positive emotions with memories artificially. Some genius though it might be a way to fight PTSD, except I think he kind of overlooked the possible side effect associating positive emotions with death and carnage.
It depends on how it is developed but if its a top down government technology there are none.
Anyone who thinks this would be fun... (Score:2)
.... raise my right hand.
Aehm, "direct"??? (Score:1)
These medical types must be blind to all the technical equipment in their "direct" communication path...
science copying art ? (Score:1)
Happy Happy Joy Joy Joy (Score:2)
Why did the Ren 'n Stimpy Happy Helmet just jump into my thoughts?
Oh no...
Quick "muscle memory" ? (Score:1)
Could this be an effective path to "teaching" muscle memory quickly with an experienced subject sharing to an inexperienced one? Wanna play guitar? Let's hook up and I'll get you through the awkwardness of some basic chord changes quickly........
If the impulses for an action came from external source instead of a persons own brain would there be a "memory" effect? How far up or down the neural pathway would it have to trigger the action for "memory" of any sort? If the subject is experiencing the action wou
Cyber Dutch Rudder is Coming Soon (Score:2)
I almost clicked.... (Score:2)
I thought "wow, cool, I need to see that video," then realized it would be a video of someone watching someone else play a video game. How could I tell who's controlling the hands?
Whew, time waste avoided.
(Still, cool.)
Finally (Score:2)
They used to say that you can pick your friends, and you can pick your nose, but you can't pick your friend's nose.
Now you can. With your friend's own hand.
Christians have been doing this for 2000 years now (Score:1)
So we now have laboratory mind control? /golfclap
Christians have been doing this for 2000 years now. It may be lowtech but it's definitely mind control.
Ihara-Grubb (Score:1)
So NOW is anybody working on a software framework for a 5-senses UI to go with the coming datajacks?
Re:Misleading... (Score:5, Insightful)
And using a telephone isn't contacting someone directly? Even as far as pedantry goes, that's pretty pedantic.
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Nope. We're still stuck with the regular level of telepathy. Still, it comes in useful when playing poker.
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Re:Misleading... (Score:5, Funny)
All those who believe in telekinesis, raise my hand.
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Threat of gun. Actual use of the gun as a communication tool only leaves you with goose feathers and meat, no more golden eggs.
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Threat of gun. Actual use of the gun as a communication tool only leaves you with goose feathers and meat, no more golden eggs.
Except that the remaining geese are more compliant to having their golden eggs taken.
You'd think so. I wonder what would happen were that tested en masse.
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Do it enough times and you'll start finding out just how many of those goose also have guns.