some 30 years ago i saw a science fiction movie where human emotions are recorded and they can be replyed using a head set like music today and the reciever feels the eact emotions .
a similar movie also came recently dealing with virtual environments and a complete experience of vision sound and emption of a recorded event experienced by a different human being
this article which came on the net almost a yeear ago shows it is possible
a similar movie also came recently dealing with virtual environments and a complete experience of vision sound and emption of a recorded event experienced by a different human being
this article which came on the net almost a yeear ago shows it is possible
First mind-reading implant gives rats telepathic power
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23221-first-mindreading-implant-gives-rats-telepathic-power.html?full=true#.UvrefPZkJBE
The world's first brain-to-brain connection has given rats the power to communicate by thought alone.
"Many people thought it could never happen," says Miguel Nicolelis at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Although monkeys have been able to control robots with their mind
using brain-to-machine interfaces, work by Nicolelis's team has, for
the first time, demonstrated a direct interface between two brains –
with the rats able to share both motor and sensory information.
The feat was achieved by first training
rats to press one of two levers when an LED above that lever was lit. A
correct action opened a hatch containing a drink of water. The rats were
then split into two groups, designated as "encoders" and "decoders".
An array of microelectrodes – each about
one-hundredth the width of a human hair – was then implanted in the
encoder rats' primary motor cortex, an area of the brain that processes
movement. The team used the implant to record the neuronal activity that
occurs just before the rat made a decision in the lever task. They
found that pressing the left lever produced a different pattern of
activity from pressing the right lever, regardless of which was the
correct action.
Next, the team recreated these patterns in
decoder rats, using an implant in the same brain area that stimulates
neurons rather than recording from them. The decoders received a few
training sessions to prime them to pick the correct lever in response to
the different patterns of stimulation.
Implants linked
The researchers then wired up the implants of
an encoder and a decoder rat. The pair were given the same lever-press
task again, but this time only the encoder rats saw the LEDs come on.
Brain signals from the encoder rat were recorded just before they
pressed the lever and transmitted to the decoder rat. The team found
that the decoders, despite having no visual cue, pressed the correct
lever between 60 and 72 per cent of the time.
The rats' ability to cooperate was
reinforced by rewarding both rats if the communication resulted in a
correct outcome. Such reinforcement led to the transmission of clearer
signals, improving the rats' success rate compared with cases where
decoders were given a pre-recorded signal. This was a big surprise, says
Nicolelis. "The encoder's brain activity became more precise. This
could have happened because the animal enhanced its attention during the
performance of the next trial after a decoder error."
If the decoders had not been primed to
relate specific activity with the left or right lever prior to the being
linked with an encoder, the only consequence would be that it would
have taken a bit more time for them to learn the task while interacting
with the encoder, says Nicolelis. "We simply primed the decoder so that
it would get the gist of the task it had to perform." In unpublished
monkey experiments doing a similar task, the team did not need to prime
the animals at all.
In a second experiment, rats were trained
to explore a hole with their whiskers and indicate if it was narrow or
wide by turning to the left or right. Pairs of rats were then connected
as before, but this time the implants were placed in their primary
somatosensory cortex, an area that processes touch. Decoder rats were
able to indicate over 60 per cent of the time the width of a gap that
only the encoder rats were exploring.
Finally, encoder rats were held still
while their whiskers were stroked with metal bars. The researchers
observed patterns of activity in the somatosensory cortex of the decoder
rats that matched that of the encoder rats, even though the whiskers of
the decoder rats had not been touched.
Pairs of rats were even able to cooperate
across continents using cyberspace. Brain signals from an encoder rat at
the Edmond and Lily Safra International Institute of Neuroscience of
Natal in Brazil were sent to a decoder in Nicolelis's lab in North
Carolina via the internet. Though there was a slight transmission delay,
the decoder rat still performed with an accuracy similar to those of
rats in closer proximity with encoders.
Wake-up call
Christopher James
at the University of Warwick, UK, who works on brain-to-machine
interfaces for prostheses, says the work is a "wake-up call" for people
who haven't caught up with recent advances in brain research.
We have the technology to create implants
for long-term use, he says. What is missing, though, is a full
understanding of the brain processes involved. In this case, Nicolelis's
team is "blasting a relatively large area of the brain with a signal
they're not sure is 100 per cent correct," he says.
That's because the exact information being
communicated between the rats' brains is not clear. The brain activity
of the encoders cannot be transferred precisely to the decoders because
that would require matching the patterns neuron for neuron, which is not
currently possible. Instead, the two patterns are closely related in
terms of their frequency and spatial representation.
"We are still using a sledgehammer to
crack a walnut," says James. "They're not hearing the voice of God." But
the rats are certainly sending and receiving more than a binary signal
that simply points to one or other lever, he says. "I think it will be
possible one day to transfer an abstract thought."
The decoders have to interpret relatively complex brain patterns, says Marshall Shuler
at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. The animals learn
the relevance of these new patterns and their brains adapt to the
signals. "But the decoders are probably not having the same quality of
experience as the encoders," he says.
Military potential
Patrick Degenaar
at Newcastle University in the UK says that the military might one day
be able to deploy genetically modified insects or small mammals that are
controlled by the brain signals of a remote human operator. These would
be drones that could feed themselves, he says, and could be used for
surveillance or even assassination missions. "You'd probably need a
flying bug to get near the head [of someone to be targeted]," he says.
Nicolelis is most excited about the future
of multiple networked brains. He is currently trialling the implants in
monkeys, getting them to work together telepathically to complete a
task. For example, each monkey might only have access to part of the
information needed to make the right decision in a game. Several monkeys
would then need to communicate with each other in order to successfully
complete the task.
"In the distant future we may be able to
communicate via a brain-net," says Nicolelis. "I would be very glad if
the brain-net my great-grandchildren used was due to their
great-grandfather's work."
Journal reference: Nature Scientific Reports, DOI: 10.1038/srep01319
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