America's #1 Online Cigar Auction
first, best, biggest!

Last post 19 years ago by SteveS. 3 replies replies.
Man sends e-mail by thought -amazing article-
Thom Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 12-08-2003
Posts: 6,117
http://www.nature.com/news/2004/041011/full/041011-9.html

An pill-sized brain chip has allowed a quadriplegic man to check e-mail and play computer games using his thoughts. The device can tap into a hundred neurons at a time, and is the most sophisticated such implant tested in humans so far.

Many paralysed people control computers with their eyes or tongue. But muscle function limits these techniques, and they require a lot of training. For over a decade researchers have been trying to find a way to tap directly into thoughts.

In June 2004, surgeons implanted a device containing 100 electrodes into the motor cortex of a 24-year-old quadriplegic. The device, called the BrainGate, was developed by the company Cyberkinetics, based in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Each electrode taps into a neuron in the patient's brain.

The BrainGate allowed the patient to control a computer or television using his mind, even when doing other things at the same time. Researchers report for example that he could control his television while talking and moving his head.

The team now plans to implant devices into four more patients.

Brain waves



The tiny sensor consists of an array of 100 electrodes to capture signals from the brain.
© Alamy
Rival teams are building devices to read brain activity without touching neurons. Neural Signals, based in Atlanta, has patented a conductive skull screw that sits outside the brain, just under the skull. Other researchers are developing non-invasive technologies, for example using an electroencephalogram to read a patient's thoughts.

But BrainGate's creators argue that such techniques only give a general picture of brain activity, and that the more direct approach allows more numerous and more specific signals to be translated. "This array has 100 electrodes, so one can theoretically tap into 100 neurons," says Jon Mukand, an investigator on the team based at the Sargent Rehabilitation Center in Rhode Island.

This makes the technology faster and more flexible, he argues. "It's far more versatile when one can get a larger number of neurons."

But Stephen Roberts, an engineer at Oxford University, UK, who has worked on brain-computer interfaces, says the field is still waiting for a breakthrough. "We have to make something that works robustly and without a lot of patient training," he says. "Most of these devices work well on a small subset of patients, but there's a long way to go before getting them to work for the general population."
SteveS Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 01-13-2002
Posts: 8,751
Fascinating stuff such as this is the reason I often say I'd like to live for at least 100 more years in order to see where some of these exciting technical advances will take us ...
usahog Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 12-06-1999
Posts: 22,691
I heard on the news last evening that they now have computer chips that can be installed in humans that store all their medical data on them.. and that now these can be installed and people can have all their information for the doctors ready with just a scan...

some of this **** scares me...

computer chips for find your kids programs. nifty idea but what is really do?

No Thanks Big Brother!!!!!

Hog
SteveS Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 01-13-2002
Posts: 8,751
How to control the use of fire was an important discovery in the eons of human evolution ... those who said "fire? ... not for me, bro ... might burn the cave down" were quickly at a great disadvantage to those who were quick adapters ...

Today, if you use a grinder or a power saw, you take precautions such as goggles ... ride your Harley, you put on leathers ... and you probably don't light charcoal briquet fires in the middle of the kitchen floor ...

Technology is a tool ... no more, no less. And, as with any other tool, controlled use is advantageous to the user, uncontrolled use can be dangerous ...

Users browsing this topic
Guest