linkn a world first, a team of researchers has achieved brain-to-brain transmission of information between humans.
The team managed to send messages from India to France - a distance of 5,000 miles - without performing invasive surgery on the test subjects.
There were four participants in the study, aged between 28 and 50.
One was assigned to a brain-computer interface to transmit the thought, while the three others were assigned to receive the thought.
The first participant, located in India, was shown words translated into binary, and had to envision actions for each piece of information.
For example, they could move their hands for a 1 or their legs for a 0.
A technique known as electroencephalogry - which monitors brain signals from the outside - was used to record the thoughts as outgoing messages and send them via the internet.
At the other end, electromagnetic induction was used to stimulate the brain's visual cortex from the outside and pass on the signal successfully to the three other participants in France.
The report's co-author, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, said: "We wanted to find out if one could communicate directly between two people by reading out the brain activity from one person and injecting brain activity into the second person, and do so across great physical distances by leveraging existing communication pathways.
"One such pathway is, of course, the internet, so our question became, 'Could we develop an experiment that would bypass the talking or typing part of internet and establish direct brain-to-brain communication between subjects located far away from each other in India and France?"
The research team was made up of researchers from Harvard University, as well experts from France and Spain
brain to brain transmission
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
brain to brain transmission
`Kind of cool. Now they just need to do it without all the equipment
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- Broomstick
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Re: brain to brain transmission
Um...OK... interesting.
I'll stick to telephone and e-mail for now, though, as I'm not sure how this would be an improvement. Still, it's early days...
I'll stick to telephone and e-mail for now, though, as I'm not sure how this would be an improvement. Still, it's early days...
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Now I did a job. I got nothing but trouble since I did it, not to mention more than a few unkind words as regard to my character so let me make this abundantly clear. I do the job. And then I get paid.- Malcolm Reynolds, Captain of Serenity, which sums up my feelings regarding the lawsuit discussed here.
If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich. - John F. Kennedy
Sam Vimes Theory of Economic Injustice
Re: brain to brain transmission
It's bad enough having a phone call with someone while you're watching porn, imagine if it's intermingled with the thoughts you are sending to the person on the other end of the call...
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Re: brain to brain transmission
It's a publicity stunt, it is in no way useful or even terribbly relevant to brain-computer-interfacibg research. Dragon presumably picked it to try and start a thread about the implications of actual mechanucal telepathy, not because anyone is surprised or cares that two pre-existing very basic BCI techniques were chained via the Internet.Broomstick wrote:Um...OK... interesting.
I'll stick to telephone and e-mail for now, though, as I'm not sure how this would be an improvement. Still, it's early days...
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Re: brain to brain transmission
Speak for your self. This is the first time I have heard that we can actually inject thoughts into a brain. I knew we could read from it, but inject into it as well? That is cool.Starglider wrote:It's a publicity stunt, it is in no way useful or even terribbly relevant to brain-computer-interfacibg research. Dragon presumably picked it to try and start a thread about the implications of actual mechanucal telepathy, not because anyone is surprised or cares that two pre-existing very basic BCI techniques were chained via the Internet.Broomstick wrote:Um...OK... interesting.
I'll stick to telephone and e-mail for now, though, as I'm not sure how this would be an improvement. Still, it's early days...
It has become clear to me in the previous days that any attempts at reconciliation and explanation with the community here has failed. I have tried my best. I really have. I pored my heart out trying. But it was all for nothing.
You win. There, I have said it.
Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
You win. There, I have said it.
Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
Re: brain to brain transmission
How does the injecting thoughts part work ? The article seem unclear, can we actually send imagery or impulses into a brain ? I thought it is just read only at the moment,
Re: brain to brain transmission
The only 'thoughts' they 'injected' were sensations of flashes of light triggered by stimulating the vision center of the brain. We can send (very, very crude) images is by surgically interfacing with a healthy optic nerve, but that is completely unrelated to the method they used in this publicity stunt.
Re: brain to brain transmission
So you could stimulate the brain to see light flashes that are not actually there ? Thats pretty cool !Feil wrote:The only 'thoughts' they 'injected' were sensations of flashes of light triggered by stimulating the vision center of the brain. We can send (very, very crude) images is by surgically interfacing with a healthy optic nerve, but that is completely unrelated to the method they used in this publicity stunt.
Re: brain to brain transmission
The light flashes are technically there(think of them as a physical entity), it's a matter of whether the nerves are of the type that can "see" them. There are plenty of examples of animals that can see a wide range of unique frequencies outside of what the humans can.sarevok2 wrote: So you could stimulate the brain to see light flashes that are not actually there ? Thats pretty cool !
Re: brain to brain transmission
That's not really true. EM Induction technically involves pulses of light, but the flashes of light that the occipital lobe makes you "see" are not in any meaningful sense detection of those particular pulses. The same pulse of signal can generate different (or no) observations in the same subject.
A decent analogy would be a kennel of dogs and a dog whistle. You might or might not hear howls when somebody whistles, and you're more likely to hear more howls when they're whistling a lot, but you're not in any real sense hearing the dog whistle when the dogs are howling: you're observing a semi-random response that happened to be triggered by a stimulus of the same general type.
A decent analogy would be a kennel of dogs and a dog whistle. You might or might not hear howls when somebody whistles, and you're more likely to hear more howls when they're whistling a lot, but you're not in any real sense hearing the dog whistle when the dogs are howling: you're observing a semi-random response that happened to be triggered by a stimulus of the same general type.
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Re: brain to brain transmission
So basically as far as any actual information transfer is concerned it is all but useless?
It has become clear to me in the previous days that any attempts at reconciliation and explanation with the community here has failed. I have tried my best. I really have. I pored my heart out trying. But it was all for nothing.
You win. There, I have said it.
Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
You win. There, I have said it.
Now there is only one thing left to do. Let us see if I can sum up the strength needed to end things once and for all.
Re: brain to brain transmission
more done with rats
link
Researchers have electronically linked the brains of pairs of rats for the first time, enabling them to communicate directly to solve simple behavioral puzzles. A further test of this work successfully linked the brains of two animals thousands of miles apart -- one in Durham, N.C., and one in Natal, Brazil.
The results of these projects suggest the future potential for linking multiple brains to form what the research team is calling an "organic computer," which could allow sharing of motor and sensory information among groups of animals. The study was published Feb. 28, 2013, in the journal Scientific Reports.
"Our previous studies with brain-machine interfaces had convinced us that the rat brain was much more plastic than we had previously thought," said Miguel Nicolelis, M.D., PhD, lead author of the publication and professor of neurobiology at Duke University School of Medicine. "In those experiments, the rat brain was able to adapt easily to accept input from devices outside the body and even learn how to process invisible infrared light generated by an artificial sensor. So, the question we asked was, 'if the brain could assimilate signals from artificial sensors, could it also assimilate information input from sensors from a different body?'"
To test this hypothesis, the researchers first trained pairs of rats to solve a simple problem: to press the correct lever when an indicator light above the lever switched on, which rewarded the rats with a sip of water. They next connected the two animals' brains via arrays of microelectrodes inserted into the area of the cortex that processes motor information.
One of the two rodents was designated as the "encoder" animal. This animal received a visual cue that showed it which lever to press in exchange for a water reward. Once this "encoder" rat pressed the right lever, a sample of its brain activity that coded its behavioral decision was translated into a pattern of electrical stimulation that was delivered directly into the brain of the second rat, known as the "decoder" animal.
The decoder rat had the same types of levers in its chamber, but it did not receive any visual cue indicating which lever it should press to obtain a reward. Therefore, to press the correct lever and receive the reward it craved, the decoder rat would have to rely on the cue transmitted from the encoder via the brain-to-brain interface.
The researchers then conducted trials to determine how well the decoder animal could decipher the brain input from the encoder rat to choose the correct lever. The decoder rat ultimately achieved a maximum success rate of about 70 percent, only slightly below the possible maximum success rate of 78 percent that the researchers had theorized was achievable based on success rates of sending signals directly to the decoder rat's brain.
Importantly, the communication provided by this brain-to-brain interface was two-way. For instance, the encoder rat did not receive a full reward if the decoder rat made a wrong choice. The result of this peculiar contingency, said Nicolelis, led to the establishment of a "behavioral collaboration" between the pair of rats.
"We saw that when the decoder rat committed an error, the encoder basically changed both its brain function and behavior to make it easier for its partner to get it right," Nicolelis said. "The encoder improved the signal-to-noise ratio of its brain activity that represented the decision, so the signal became cleaner and easier to detect. And it made a quicker, cleaner decision to choose the correct lever to press. Invariably, when the encoder made those adaptations, the decoder got the right decision more often, so they both got a better reward."
In a second set of experiments, the researchers trained pairs of rats to distinguish between a narrow or wide opening using their whiskers. If the opening was narrow, they were taught to nose-poke a water port on the left side of the chamber to receive a reward; for a wide opening, they had to poke a port on the right side.
The researchers then divided the rats into encoders and decoders. The decoders were trained to associate stimulation pulses with the left reward poke as the correct choice, and an absence of pulses with the right reward poke as correct. During trials in which the encoder detected the opening width and transmitted the choice to the decoder, the decoder had a success rate of about 65 percent, significantly above chance.
To test the transmission limits of the brain-to-brain communication, the researchers placed an encoder rat in Brazil, at the Edmond and Lily Safra International Institute of Neuroscience of Natal (ELS-IINN), and transmitted its brain signals over the Internet to a decoder rat in Durham, N.C. They found that the two rats could still work together on the tactile discrimination task.
"So, even though the animals were on different continents, with the resulting noisy transmission and signal delays, they could still communicate," said Miguel Pais-Vieira, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow and first author of the study. "This tells us that it could be possible to create a workable, network of animal brains distributed in many different locations."
Nicolelis added, "These experiments demonstrated the ability to establish a sophisticated, direct communication linkage between rat brains, and that the decoder brain is working as a pattern-recognition device. So basically, we are creating an organic computer that solves a puzzle."
"But in this case, we are not inputting instructions, but rather only a signal that represents a decision made by the encoder, which is transmitted to the decoder's brain which has to figure out how to solve the puzzle. So, we are creating a single central nervous system made up of two rat brains," said Nicolelis. He pointed out that, in theory, such a system is not limited to a pair of brains, but instead could include a network of brains, or "brain-net." Researchers at Duke and at the ELS-IINN are now working on experiments to link multiple animals cooperatively to solve more complex behavioral tasks.
"We cannot predict what kinds of emergent properties would appear when animals begin interacting as part of a brain-net. In theory, you could imagine that a combination of brains could provide solutions that individual brains cannot achieve by themselves," continued Nicolelis. Such a connection might even mean that one animal would incorporate another's sense of "self," he said.
"In fact, our studies of the sensory cortex of the decoder rats in these experiments showed that the decoder's brain began to represent in its tactile cortex not only its own whiskers, but the encoder rat's whiskers, too. We detected cortical neurons that responded to both sets of whiskers, which means that the rat created a second representation of a second body on top of its own." Basic studies of such adaptations could lead to a new field that Nicolelis calls the "neurophysiology of social interaction."
Such complex experiments will be enabled by the laboratory's ability to record brain signals from almost 2,000 brain cells at once. The researchers hope to record the electrical activity produced simultaneously by 10-30,000 cortical neurons in the next five years.
Such massive brain recordings will enable more precise control of motor neuroprostheses -- such as those being developed by the Walk Again Project -- to restore motor control to paralyzed people, Nicolelis said.
The Walk Again Project recently received a $20 million grant from FINEP, a Brazilian research funding agency, to allow the development of the first brain-controlled whole-body exoskeleton aimed at restoring mobility in severely paralyzed patients. A first demonstration of this technology is scheduled for the opening game of the 2014 Soccer World Cup in Brazil.
"There are very few problems that cannot be solved by the suitable application of photon torpedoes
Re: brain to brain transmission
Seems to be the same experiment without the safety consideration of restricting the receiver to the occipital lobe, and using rats instead of people. Same procedure, though: teach the transmitter how to generate a burst of signal, teach the receiver that detecting a burst of signal means "choice 1".
Maybe there's some legitimate scientific purpose to both of these experiments, like providing a baseline for some core element of a largely unrelated technique, and the journalists are just latching on to the sensationalistic "omg telepathy" without paying attention to whatever esoteric purpose the scientists are really trying to get at. My guess, though? The purpose of the telepathy experiments and breathless sensationalism about emergent phenomena and brain-nets* is to get funding for their real goals. Twenty million dollars towards developing a brain-controlled exoskeleton, in exchange for bamboozling a few reporters and politicians with buzz-words and decades-old science? Not a bad day's work.
*(Network it however you want, at the end of the day it's still a just one-word protolanguage. Rats have had access to better langauges since before there were rats, in the form of vocalizations, body language, etc.)
Maybe there's some legitimate scientific purpose to both of these experiments, like providing a baseline for some core element of a largely unrelated technique, and the journalists are just latching on to the sensationalistic "omg telepathy" without paying attention to whatever esoteric purpose the scientists are really trying to get at. My guess, though? The purpose of the telepathy experiments and breathless sensationalism about emergent phenomena and brain-nets* is to get funding for their real goals. Twenty million dollars towards developing a brain-controlled exoskeleton, in exchange for bamboozling a few reporters and politicians with buzz-words and decades-old science? Not a bad day's work.
*(Network it however you want, at the end of the day it's still a just one-word protolanguage. Rats have had access to better langauges since before there were rats, in the form of vocalizations, body language, etc.)