The Cat Cam 223
PhilHibbs sent us an article from wired that talks about Neuroscientists creating
videos from a cats eyes using electrodes implanted in a cats brain.
Here are some
Pictures.
Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.
Real ethical issues here (Score:3)
The ethical questions would be much more obvious if the test subject were human, of course.
A couple of starting points:
When do we have the right to monitor the perceptions of a living organism?
What effects does this procedure have on the organism? Can it lead a normal life once the probes have been removed?
I think this is good research. I'm not opposed to it. But that's because I've thought these things through.
Mirror (Score:5)
Hope they don't mind me taking a load off their server. Be gentle, now!
Re:Cruel. (Score:1)
This isn't what the cat _saw_... (Score:1)
The human eye doesn't really see all that much! (Score:1)
Then run around screaming. Of course the server was slashdotted, it was serving out a 1MB jpeg and having the client browser reside it to 600xsomething!!
The image could have easily been 80K if they had shrunk it using any image editor.
I sometimes wonder about these people...
Anyway, this is EXTREMLY interesting...
I've read that the image the human eye physically sees is actually distorted, full of chromatic aberration, etc., and the brain compensates to make the image look perfect. Also, the resolution of the human eye isn't that high. There is a central point called the fovea that has an extremely large amount of retinal cells. Notice how, in order to read, you must move your eyes constantly from word to word; this is because the fovea is the only point with sufficient resolution to view things with pristine sharpness, and the fovea is rather small. This is also why idiots who look at solar eclipses can do so much damage to their vision even if only a tiny part of the retina is damaged.. their fovea gets roasted and this is where you see all the detail!
What this means is, the data stream coming from the human eye probably isn't that large. If we could only figure out the interface, constructing an adequate artificial eye would probably not be that difficult. Interfacing is the key, and this experiment shows that we are that much closer.
Re:Cruel. (Score:1)
Plugging in electrodes, or intentionally giving animals cancer doesn't compare to killing something for the purposes of nourishment. The later goes elsewhere without our involvement, the former doesn't
1 MEG! (Score:1)
The code's been cracked (Score:1)
But cracking that code is an incredible achievement, and I suspect it has major implications beyond the visual. It means we know more about how nerves and brains work.
Fear my wrath, please, fear my wrath?
Homer
A bit of info about this technology (Score:2)
And FYI, not all scientists are inhuman monsters.
Unfortunately, If they are using standard implant electrode technology, it's not very stable. This means that over time(days-weeks) you will lose access to those cells. Also, they had to laboriously catalog (I assume) the response of each and every cell, and then apply each cell's response as a filter on a small area of space as shown in the figure.
Any inevitable drift in the electrode would screw this up big time, requiring a complete recataloging of spike waveforms and their spatial filters.
So I wouldn't expect this to be field mountable without some major advances in neuron recording technology. The metal wire in the brain is just too invasive in the long term.
As for implanting them in cats and soldiers as mobile spies, why not just use a camera mounted to their head (with maybe a gaze tracker if you want to monitor precisely what they're looking at)? I don't understand what the benefit of this technology is, compared to a small camera. There is an immense "pain-in-the-ass" factor of using it practically.
Not to say it's not important, this is awesome news. I just don't think it has much practical application as a spy cam in the near future. Now creating artificial eyes, that's something, and this is right on target.
Go humans.
-Illserve
Re:great news (Score:1)
Feel their pain, too... (Score:2)
Seriously - I find this to be a very disturbing study. I'm not going to cop a holier-than-thou attitude here; I myself have done painful neurological experiments on living rats for no better reason than to satisfy a course requirement. And scientifically, this study is tricky work, well done. However, you really have to question the motives here. This is the ultimate in gee-whiz graphics, and by posting it on slashdot for a bunch of non-neuroscientists to ooh and ahh at, we're really buying into that.
Donna Haraway has written about the importance of vision in science [dragonfire.net] (Before you dismiss her as just another of those postmodern feminist theorists who of course don't know what they're talking about, like Randy's overstereotyped ex in Necronomicon, you should read her
"Cyborg Manifesto" [stanford.edu]). She's arguing that no picture, not even natural vision, is as direct and honest as it seems to be. As science strives (rightly) for true objectivity, it tends towards several kinds of false objectivity. Pictures are one such method. They seem natural - it's easy for the layman to say "Oh, that's what a cat sees," rather than "That's a picture constructed by scientists as an educated guess about what a cat sees". This is not as bad as the false objectivity that says "Who are you to challenge my objectivity? You're not white and male, so whatever you say is obviously biased.", but it's a step in the wrong direction.
The way to fight this kind of false objectivity is to appreciate what went into making the image. When you see something, appreciate that it's actually being projected upside down on your retina, multiplied by three color/response curves, broken down into shapes and movement, and so on; the mechanisms of your vision bias you to pay attention to some attributes and unavoidably ignore others. And when you see a picture, appreciate how constructed that is. In this case, that means that the picture came to you through a very unhappy cat, into some electrodes, through some statistical software, and through the web. Anyone who can look at these pictures without feeling some real suffering in sympathy with that cat is not truly objective enough to be a scientist.
[Of course, most
Cinematic applications?! (Score:1)
Everything technological that has any 'neato' status -- from the radio to the television to computer graphics to the Web ends up becoming an entertainment (and/or marketing) tool.
Forget speculation about how far we are from Tek chips (btw, see last weeks news) or SQUID drives for your coolness predictions. Movie writers would probably enjoy the idea of being able to rig an actor up for vision-recording.
Imagine a real-life Truman Show done from Truman's own eyes.
This would also be a benefit for research done on what people look at, what attracts their attention based on their eye focus and its duration on any object. Xref the research done last month on banner ads or the research done on a good driver's attention patterns.
(Which ultimately would lead to advanced marketing research, of course -- how effective an ad is based on the attention it gets.)
Now, for maximum coolness potential, what I want to know is, does this technology pick up the aberrations in vision in a person on drugs? That sort of thing could cut drug use in half or more.
(On a more serious note, if they can also tap and reconstruct audio reception, I'd also like to be able to record my dreams. Wouldn't you?)
disclaimer (Score:1)
I was saying that these are complicated ideas, and in order to summarize I've simplified a little.
Half-dead mouse cam.... (Score:1)
Or a wet paw swiping over the screen every 5 seconds as the cat washes its face.
Or if it was like a very old cat I once had, the bottom of its food bowl when it fell asleep with its face in the cat food.
what if it solves human blindness? (Score:1)
This is not just a matter of curiousity. This is genuine research. Research with making humans see images (who have no eyes) with direct interaction with the brain from electrodes has already been done to a small degree.
I can't agree (Score:1)
Were they hoping to gain fame? Of course they appreciate the prestige of making a public show, they're still human. Why are they less deserving of the fruits of their labor than anyone else revered for their contributions to science, technology, or the arts?
As for the "seeing like a cat" comments. Yes it's an oversimplified statement, but that doesn't mean this work is not important. It's part of an attempt to understand the changes that occur in visual information as it progresses through the brain, which is critical for understanding vision (and thereby make artificial eyes, understand consciousness, yadda yadda).
You can debate the importance of that if you want, but if you accept that that's a valid field of study, this is a necessary stepping stone IMO.
-Illserve
Giant squid cam (Score:1)
Half of what they'll see... (Score:1)
Seriously, this is cool, groovy cool. We're on the way to make borg-things.
The new sports fad will be the "Eye-Cam". We'll see the game like it's never been seen before...
__________________
Re:great news (Score:1)
The article was very intriguing, and the rest of the issue had some cool stuff in it, too.
(Sorry for the off-topic post.)
Not so fast... (Score:1)
Another thing shall be stressed - the working of a peripherial signal transduction nervous systems is peanuts compared to the complex brain functions, like image recognition and interpretation.
An article in Nature [http] on how the brain interpretes what the eyes see shows how complex it all is.
Re:Somebody please mirror the images! (Score:1)
Oops (Score:1)
Re:Half of what they'll see... (Score:1)
Night vision cat goggles
LickCam!
Or in the case of a Borg cat, imagine 7 of 9
with 8 breasts??? Sorry, that's a Borg in a
catsuit.
Really, the possibilities are endless.
Now if they'd only enable me to click a MUTE
button for one of our cats...
Oh Lord (Score:1)
1. Kitty watching owner have sex
2. Kitty watching owner take a shower
3. Kitty watching owner sit on the toilet
4. Kitty watching owner get dressed
My cats' favorite pasttime is "watching owner", so I can just see it now, I take in a stray and end up being plastered all over the porn (Pussy-cam) web sites. Lovely.
Of course they'd have to be really patient to sit through scenes of kitty snoozing, and then not looking at the really "interesting" things while they're going on. Heh.
Re:Why Must We Test On Animals?/Talk to My Cat (Score:1)
But the criminal thing you've got to understand. "Eye for an eye." Besides, criminals could speak out against scientific testing. Animals can't.
Scientific research like this worries me anyway. We hear about these things, then that person/animal goes away from public view, then comes back a few years later and we found out it's died or what not. Yeah it's cool, it's a scientific achievement.
I love posting things like that. I like making people think : )
miyax, who is scheduled to be removed from the gene pool at 5:45 eastern standard time (just kidding)
Free Prosthetics Deal (Score:1)
Dreamweaver
Re:Will (Score:1)
of an experiment? You mean they can evaluate
long term benefit to human species vs. short
term detriment to themselves and decide if they
feel generous? Further, do you mean that cats
have a notion of good and bad?
Re:Applications? (Score:1)
How about:
3. Say good-bye to the camcorder. Particularly useful for journalists. This idea was used a bit in Greg Egan's "Distress" [amazon.com] an excellent book, fantastic author.
With better resolution, no need for a camera crew, although you'd need a mirror for shots of your self :-)
BTW anyone know the max resolution we could get with a human eye?
Re:Journal of Neuroscience isn't public (Score:1)
Re:Cats as voyeurism-enabling devices (Score:1)
Joke? (Score:1)
This explains it (Score:1)
This morning I wake up, my head hurts like someone has drilled a hole in it and my vision is screwed.
Bastards - if you're reading this through my eyes now, I'm coming to get you.
Excellent! (Score:3)
Yes. (Score:1)
where do I get one? (Score:1)
Re:Joke? (Score:1)
Already being done. We're all just power sources living inside a gigantic virtual reality world, or haven't you seen The Matrix yet?
There is no spoon!
A cure for blindness? (Score:2)
I hope the artificial ones don't come in a visor that looks like an air-filter from a '75 Buick.
Re:Cruel. (Score:1)
Why should we decide there fate?
great news (Score:2)
If the researchers had been unable to get their images, then they would have had to rethink the basics again.
Deciphering vision is but the first step in making borg. It would be wonderful to make Geordi's eyes for blind people, and some new inner ears for deaf people. Borg don't have to be bad at all. I think borg-like devices will help a lot of people.
A question: How complicated is the vision system compared to the signals on the spinal cord? Could these same ideas be used to realize the dream of Christopher Reeves to walk again someday?
Re:Cruel. (Score:1)
Bully syndrome. I'm bigger than you. Ergo I'm better than you.
*sigh*
Applications? (Score:1)
(Due the fact that either the firewall at my job sucks or the site has been slashdotted, I haven't actually been able to see the site yet, but...)
Things you could do with it-
1. Implant it in sex offenders. Check the records when someone accuses them. You can apply this to just about any other class of criminals known for repetitive behavior. Very high potential for misuse.
2. Find out what the pets really do when you're not at home. Or what animals do when observers can't study them.
That's about it that I can think of. Any other ideas?
-Ender
Syringes (Score:1)
Cat scan (Score:3)
Yes its bad i know, but i can't help but share
Applications and ethics (Score:3)
The military might find it attractive to implant this type of system into its troops in the field, and those dolphins they train to redirect enemy torpedoes. (Yeah I know, they say they quit that, but they can always restart it.)
There is a "bright" side of course, this type of recording could be used to train people how to do a by giving them the experiences of someone skilled in that area. You could learn how to play hockey by being Wayne Gretzky for an afternoon.
It is a bit of a stretch, but if this method is extended to other processes you could "teach" certain purely cognitive processes by example. Wouldn't it be neat to learn to do Physics by being Stephen Hawking for a few days. That is about the only way to gain a real insight into how he solves problems and how he understands the universe.
Before this type of "learning" could take place there may have to be a non-invasive method for retrieving the necessary data patterns from a brain.
Unfortunately the possibilites for abuse are so high, it is scary. Just because we can do a thing doesn't mean we should do a thing. It has already been mentioned that certain entities may want to use these possible future systems to monitor criminals.
What if the government decides to monitor anyone with access to classified information ? What if they decide they want to monitor people who are percieved to be a threat ? Let's say they get used to that sort of thing over time, will they then want to monitor everyone all the time ? After all if you have nothing to hide...
What are the boundaries ? What kind of world can this technology create ? What kind of world should this technology create ? Before moving forward too quickly we should understand the extremes of the application possible.
Science Fiction has shown dystopic visions of civilizations equipped with ultimate personal monitoring technology. (1984, Borg...) Has anyone seen a Utopian vision of a community with this technology ? What does it mean to bereft of all personal privacy ? Can humans remain sane without their privacy ? Which, if any, of our thoughts and actions does any government or community have a "need to know ? Is this sort of thing ever appropiate, regardless of the benefits it may provide to civilization ?
Re:You think that's scary, check out this!! (Score:1)
The ArachnaCat? I thought the spideys in Doom II were bad that things gonna give me nightmares.
and the testimonials? My cat needed help balancing. You gave him extra legs now he's great.
I'm gonna go twitch in the corner muttering things about bionic cats taking over the world.
-cpd
We need to help these poor guys... (Score:1)
Cats as voyeurism-enabling devices (Score:3)
Voyeur: Yeah, baby... take it off for Daddy! That's it... show me the goods-- Hey! Damn cat! Stop playing with blinds, there's a naked woman in there! No, no! Look the other way!
Re:Joke? (Score:1)
Power and Heat problems. (Score:2)
Anyway, the problem with application of this sort of technology is mostly in the power supply, and in heat dissipation requirements. There's no safe place (for the cat) to put a battery, and the heat generated can cause problems. The reason I only have the cat's skull, now, is because kitty didn't live very long...
Re:Giant squid cam (Score:1)
Re:Applications? (Score:2)
That damn Taco Bell Chihuahua gets my vote as a test subject. Put down the chalupa, indeed...
This Explains Alot! (Score:2)
Maybe this explains his weird opinions and bizarre writing style!
Re:Why Must We Test On Animals?/Talk to My Cat (Score:1)
Re:Applications? (Score:1)
of progress is a leap for AI. Being able to
build a brain in a factory is very appealing,
since this would allow one to make artificial
thinking machines and eventually replace humans
with a more efficient civilization, because
we humans consume too much and our lives are too
short to be truly productive. This is also
desirable for cataclysmic events: no more
dinosaur extinctions - if conditions change
factories make reoptimized generation in a matter
of hours.
Imagine a world without environmentalists
or any other crap that exists because our human
form requires it. Hopefully this will happen
_before_ this civilization runs out of oil.
Re:Yes. (Score:1)
Are you on drugs????????????
Re:Gee, why bother with cats? (Score:2)
The Bush Millie was a Springer Spaniel. She died a year or two ago, if I recall.
- -Josh Turiel
Re:This could be trouble....for someone (Score:2)
Either it'd cough it up like a furball or bury it somewhere after expelling it elsewhere. In which case you'd need a radio transimitter in it anyway to locate it.
Still, I think the whole thing is pretty cool. Does this mean they'll eventually be able to say, get signal from a video camera and 'insert' it into this same area of the brain in order to allow blind people to see? (by having a tiny camera in their glasses or something). If they can decode the signal it probably wouldn't be too much harder to encode the signal and make the neurons fire. This is all of course assuming the process for humans isn't too different than that for cats.
We're getting closer to the whole Matrix thing ;)
Re:Here is what /. should do: (Score:1)
Re:Yes. (Score:1)
use a scanner...like in star trek to see it (Score:1)
http://www.exn.ca/mini/startrek/
Re:Giant squid cam (Score:1)
Er, good luck getting the GPS signals down that deep. And sperm whales prolly navigate more by sonar at those lightless depths.
>so we can find out where these suckers hang out.
On the squids' tentacles, obviously!
Gee, why bother with cats? (Score:2)
- -Josh Turiel
Description (Score:2)
Re:Movie making possibities (Score:1)
Not Stephenson, but not bad.
Cruel World (Score:2)
Most of the comments on this thread have reflected little if any care about the animals involved in this "research". Do the cats voluntarily keep their eyes open? Or are they forced? When they finish with the images, do they just trash 'em, or what?
Please, take the time to reflect on the difference between Silicon and Organic constructs, and the gishy, gooey, very real and sloppy feelings that the latter endures for our curiosity.
Hence, Curiosity Killed The Cat.
Journal of Neuroscience (Score:1)
You can view the paper Here [jneurosci.org] in HTML or download the pdf Here [jneurosci.org]
Three cheers for journals which make their stuff public access !!!
Re:This could be trouble....for someone (Score:2)
Depends on the type of blindness you have. Lets assume they are able to make devices high-res enough to give a good image...
If your blindness is due to eyes that don't function[for whatever reason],then pumping this bitstream down to the brain might provide some sort of image.
However, if you have cortical blindness, all bets are off. These people have damage in the part of the brain that interprets visual signals. Therefore, even if you provided them with the highest quality image possible, they wouldn't be able to interpret what they were "seeing".
As an aside, I had a friend in med school who worked on this type of problem at the NIH a couple of years ago. IIRC, they installed a 256-pixel device in a blind patient. He did report being able to see flashes of lights from the device. I have a feeling we're going to hear much more about this in the not-too-distant future.
docwolf.
Kitty Brains and Bugs (Score:2)
This would be the ultimate wartime "bug"...Kidnap an enemy. Drug him, pop open his head, the works.
Rig an extensive, remote version of this...plug the brain cells that control vision. Voila, he leads you to his plans, allies, everything. And if you mess up, well, dang. You just scrambled a badguy's brain. Could be a lot worse. Like stepping in a hairball first thing in the morning, or cat hair all over your black wool trousers...
That would be really freaking cool, if it weren't so frightening.
Re:Yes. (Score:2)
Re:Giant squid cam (Score:1)
Witness (Score:1)
Re:Applications? (Score:1)
I once read that it's pretty poor; the reason why we perceive things at a high resolution is because our brains correct the input based on subsequent images and heuristics.
Mind you, this discovery may change this estimate.
Plugged in (Score:1)
Until the End of the World... (Score:1)
Sense/Net Star (Score:3)
Sense/Net superstar. It should be eating off
fine china for the rest of its life while the
masses hail it as a godamn messiah of newest
revolution in entertainment. Instead it will
be returned to its numbered cage and end its
life at Gillette doing first hand product
testing.
Is this any way to treat a pop icon?
What's the cat's name? What color is it? Can I
have it?
I hope y'all remember Gibson's Tally Isham.
This cat is the world's first Isham... and we treat it in such a shabby manner.
Dr. Fardook
lycos@bway.net
Re:This could be trouble....for someone (Score:1)
(Boy, and the NSA gave Furbies such a rough time, imagine what they do to a cat with a transmitter or camcorder)
Re:Cruel. (Score:1)
Re:Movie making possibities (Score:1)
Re:Excellent! (Score:1)
X-men (Score:1)
Stem cells (Score:1)
If the roles were reversed (Score:3)
just a side note (Score:1)
Re:Journal of Neuroscience isn't public (Score:1)
Strange Days (Score:1)
Re:Cruel. (Score:1)
Science Fiction (Score:2)
Re:Excellent! (Score:2)
1200 bps....wow, it's more like spb (seconds per bit) for reliable ELF EAMs -- basically, it's a Morse signal that says "USS Ustafish, COMSUBEASTLANT sends, so wake the hell up and get your sorry keister to antenna depth toot sweet. We gotta SSIX message for you to suck down off the comm bird." Only it's done in far fewer bytes. And with an antenna you would not believe.
Cat Web Cam! (Score:2)
Strange, people don't look like canopeners (Score:3)
Of course once in a while I do look like a comfy chair, which is why the cat is still around.
By the way, first post. Also, the picture site seems to have already been hit by the slashdot effect.
Hmmm... is this a first? (Score:2)
I'm getting nothing. Never send a kitty to do a grown cat's job!
Re:Hmmm... is this a first? (Score:2)
Yeah, I hope that wasn't a live feed... We might have slashdotted the cats brain. The scientists are probably wondering why its head is smoking.
Kintanon
For the humor impaired, you just missed it.
Re:Cruel World (Score:2)
Unfortunately, to maximize returns on our research, we were then forced to mash up the cats brains and put them in a blender, in preparation for DNA testing.
Be comforted to know that the cats were treated humanely and frequently rewarded with petting, stroking and repeated iterations of the words "nice kitty".
Yours Truly,
The Scientists
Re:Giant squid cam (Score:2)
The problem's not the GPS' guts per se, but the antenna. There are lots of ways for subs to overcome this. For example, they come to "antenna depth" whereby they trail a floating wire of the requisite length that's optimal for the bandwidth they want to receive. Also, there are the ESM and other antenna masts at the top of the sail.
Normally the navigator wants to get a fresh fix on the GPS birds (or another, previous sat constellation put up precisely for the purpose -- acronym escapes me, damn Alzheimer's coming on) on a regular basis, but with all the depth-changing and gyrations required, sometimes it's better (read: quieter) to just stay at patrol depth, so the skipper will tell him the hell with the fix for the time being, there's nothing much to collide with beyond the thirty-fathom line on the charts anyway.
The only reason a sat fix is necessary at all is to periodically "tighten up" the sub's intertial-nav fix, which is good to within less than the width of the sub's attack center (control room) when it's dead on, but tends to spread out as the fix becomes less accurate over time.Believe it or not, with all this high-tech gee-whiz nav stuff, there aren't many QMs around who could competently use a sextant if everything else were out of commission. I think they're going to stop, or already have stopped, teaching sextants at Annapolis.
Here's Another Mirror..... (Score:2)
http://www.vermontel.net/~vengnce/slashmirror/rec
Go easy on my server, please!
I'm sorry. What I meant to say was 'please excuse me.'
what came out of my mouth was 'Move or I'll kill you!'
Re:great news (Score:4)
dream of Christopher Reeves to walk again someday?
I'm not sure how well this type of technology would apply to spinal injury repair. I do know that more conventional treatments (chemical, forced tissue growth, some others) are starting to make decent advances in this direction. Scientific American had a very good article on precisely this about one issue back.
September 1999 issue
Unfortunately they don't have this one online, you'll have to pop down to the newstand to pick it up. I personally think sciam is definitely one of the mags everyone should have a subscription to.
But it looks like (probably) within our lifespan, or even in the next 15-20 years we might be able to correct spinal damage. It's all speculative of course, but still, at least there's some hope now.
This could be trouble....for someone (Score:5)
Anyway, I'm sure that just about any place w/ enough people has some population of stray animals. Imagine if Boris & Natasha happen to collect up the animals one day, and implant the next generation of these electrodes in the cats, along with transmitters. Suddenly, you've got a large roving population of cameras around places you really don't want pictures taken.
Even if they weren't able to get into any type of restricted area, you'd still likely get several shots of the employees, so you'd know who to target when trying to "turn" someone.
They could even go so far as to train animals from birth to perform certain tasks, such as getting into rooms with doors slightly ajar, knocking over file folders with papers in them and looking at the papers for X seconds, etc. Who would suspect a stray of spying?
Alternately, this could be the ultimate voyeur tool. "Hi, I got you this pet kitten."
Using cats for research is outrageous... (Score:2)
Re:great news (Score:2)
Microsoft have succeeded in making Borg for years
And I can tell you from experience that the implants are a bugger to get out... I had to use a 1/4" mortar drill bit, and some conc. sulfuric acid...
I still have the scars today
simon
Re:A cure for blindness? (Score:2)
If you see the issue on the newsstands still, it's the one where there's a lady experiencing, er, the heartbreak of aluminum foil.