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Monkey's brain controls robot arm (video included)

torchbearer

Lizard King
Joined
May 26, 2007
Messages
38,926
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7423184.stm (has video)

Someone build Stephen Hawkings a robot body/suit his brain can control.


Monkeys have been able to control robotic limbs using only their thoughts, scientists report.

The animals were able to feed themselves using prosthetic arms, which were controlled by brain activity.

Small probes, the width of a human hair, were inserted into the monkeys' primary motor cortex - the region of the brain that controls movement.

Writing in Nature journal, the authors said their work could eventually help amputees and people who are paralysed.

Lead researcher Dr Andrew Schwartz, who is based at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, said: "We are beginning to understand how the brain works using brain-machine interface technology.

"The more we understand about the brain, the better we'll be able to treat a wide range of brain disorders, everything from Parkinson's disease and paralysis to, eventually, Alzheimer's disease and perhaps even mental illness."

natural movement

With the probes inserted into the monkeys' motor cortices, computer software was used to interpret the brain's electrical impulses and translate them into movement through the robotic arm.

This arm was jointed like a human arm and possessed a "gripper" that mimics a hand.


we've demonstrated a higher level of precision, skill and learning.
Dr Andrew Schwartz

After some training, two monkeys - who had had their own arms restrained - were able to use the prosthetic limbs to feed themselves with marshmallows and chunks of fruit.

The researchers said that the movements were fluid and natural.

The monkeys were able to use their brains to continuously change the speed and direction of the arm and the gripper, suggesting that the monkeys had come to regard the robotic arm as a part of their own bodies.

The success rate of the experiment was 61%.

Dr Schwarz said: "In our research, we've demonstrated a higher level of precision, skill and learning.

"The monkey learns by first observing the movement, which activates its brain cells as if it was doing it. It's a lot like sports training, where trainers have athletes first imagine that they are performing the movements they desire."

Complex brain

He said the research could eventually benefit the development of prosthetic limbs for people with spinal cord injuries or for amputees.

He said: "Our immediate goal is to make a prosthetic device for people with total paralysis."

"Ultimately, our goal is to better understand brain complexity."

Commenting on the paper, Professor Paul M Matthew from the Hammersmith Hospital, said: "The challenge of interfacing the billions of nerve cells in the brain that control the full range of limb movements directly with a mechanical prosthesis has seemed impossibly difficult.

"However, this important paper confirms that the brain controls movement just by planning where to go, rather than by directing individual muscles how to make the limb get there.

"The study shows that fewer than 100 tiny electrical signals generated in the specialised area known as the 'motor cortex' can command even complex arm and hand movements.

"This moves the day when patients disabled after spinal cord injuries or amputations can use brain-controlled bionic limbs from the realm of science fiction towards science fact."
 
I strongly believe that almost everything you see and read as science fiction, will become fact one day.
 
story.doc.ock.jpg
 
They are working on video goggles to plug into the brain for the blind.

eventually, most of the human body can be replaced with machine.
brings into question what is human?
 
I like this stuff. I started going back to school a couple of years back and I'm now leaning towards acquiring a degree in biomedical engineering. This field is really exploding now with the advances being made in understanding in detail how various life processes work.

One thing that really interests me is unraveling the biological mechanisms of consciousness and identity. There is something really trippy in how a big mass of individual nerve cells sending each other chemical signals somehow manifests as an individual entity, an "I am" thought. Where is the "I"? Where does a thought begin? Thoughts don't begin at a single brain cell and then propagate from one cell to another. Multiple brain cells appear to fire at different locations of the brain when thought occurs. I think people used to conceive of consciousness like a little homonculus sitting inside the skull, driving the body like someone driving a car, but the reality is that it's more like an emergence of order from a multitude of individual entities. This property is reflected in other things in nature too, like ant hives for example.

Life is being understood more and more in a mechanistic engineering sense, as demonstrated by the experiment with the cyborg monkeys. If we can unravel the mechanism of life that allow for movement, and replace limbs with robotic equivalents, as this experiment shows, then it seems plausible that we could one day unravel the means by which our minds create our identity and construct mechanical or engineered analogues. What will life be if we can transfer our soul to silicon? Could we one day free the "software" of our minds from the "hardware" of the flesh?
 
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