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Skywizard
18th February 2014, 19:37
http://i.livescience.com/images/i/000/062/663/original/monkey-neural-prosthesis.jpg?1392738240
A schematic of the experimental setup in which brain activity from one monkey was used to
control the hand of another, sedated monkey.



In work inspired partly by the movie "Avatar," one monkey could control the body of another monkey using thought alone by connecting the brain of the puppet-master monkey to the spine of the other through a prosthesis, researchers say.

These findings could help lead to implants that help patients overcome paralysis, scientists added.

Paralysis due to nerve or spinal cord damage remains a challenge for current surgical techniques. Scientists are now attempting to restore movement to such patients with brain-machine interfaces that allow people to operate computers control robotic limbs.

"However, we were interested in seeing whether one could use brain activity to help control one's own paralyzed limb," said study author Ziv Williams, a neuro-scientist and neurosurgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital of Harvard Medical School in Boston. "The benefit there is that you are using your own body as opposed to a mechanical device, which can need a lot of support and is not always practical to carry around with you."

Ultimately, "the hope is to create a functional bypass for the damaged spinal cord or brain stem so that patients can control their own bodies," Williams told Live Science.
The researchers developed a brain-to-spinal-cord prosthesis that connected two adult male rhesus monkeys.

"I was inspired a little by the movie 'Avatar,'" Williams said. The main character in the 2009 sci-fi film is a paraplegic, and connects his brain to a computer that helps him control an artificial body.

The monkey that served as the master had electrodes wired into his brain, while the monkey that served as the avatar had electrodes wired into his spine. The avatar's hand was placed onto a joystick that controlled a cursor displayed on the master's screen.

The avatar monkey was sedated so that he had no control over his own body. Computers decoded the brain activity of the master monkey and relayed those signals to the spinal cord and muscles of the avatar monkey. This allowed the master to control the cursor by moving the hand of the avatar. The master received a reward of juice if he successfully moved the cursor onto a target.

"Probably the biggest challenge we had was having this happen in real-time," Williams said. "In theory, you can record neuronal activity any time, analyze it offline, and use those signals to stimulate the spinal cord or muscles. The trick is being able to figure out what the monkey is intending in real-time and then stimulating the spinal cord or muscles to create the desired movements."

Controlling every single muscle in a limb to carry out a desired motion would be very complex. The researchers simplified this problem "by focusing on the target of the movement as opposed to which muscles and joints are used for the movement," Williams said.

The scientists emphasize the goal of this research is not for one person to control the body of another. Rather, when it comes to treating patients with spinal cord injuries, such as quadriplegics, "we envision putting a microchip into the brain to record the activity behind the intent for movement and putting another microchip in the spinal cord below the site of injury to stimulate limb movements, and then connecting the microchips," Williams said.

"This is just a proof-of-concept," Williams said. "We only had the monkeys aim for a few targets at a time — to be clinically useful, we'd have to be able to cause many different movements in space for fine motor control. Still, we think in principle that is possible."

Williams and his colleagues Maryam Shanechi and Rollin Hu detailed their findings online today (Feb. 18) in the journal Nature Communications.



Source: http://www.livescience.com/43443-monkey-brain-controls-another-monkey.html



peace...
skywizard

Sidney
18th February 2014, 19:42
Me thinks, this is not good.

Craig
18th February 2014, 20:50
I got cold shivers reading this, anyone else?

Sidney
18th February 2014, 21:05
If the information is being released now, then it has already been in practice for over ten years, that is my official guesstimate.

pugwash84
18th February 2014, 22:19
If a monkey can control another monkey like that then a big bald monkey in power could control people. This technology makes me nervous because it could so easily be turned into a weapon xxxxx

Azt
18th February 2014, 23:46
I think this is already implemented with our politicians and bankers....

DeDukshyn
19th February 2014, 00:47
Wow ... remote controlled giants just potentially became a modern reality ... I am sure the DNA wouldn't be that hard to work up.

Wookie
19th February 2014, 01:00
um that one cord on the bottom picture better not be for solar power.

Peaceful Journeys Wookie

Crystine
19th February 2014, 03:16
Me thinks, this is not good.

Creepy. Unintended consequences comes to mind.

Sidney
19th February 2014, 03:33
Me thinks, this is not good.

Creepy. Unintended consequences comes to mind.
Or even worse, creepy INTENDED consequences.:chess:

mahalall
19th February 2014, 14:34
Conscious battles with super monkeyego's. It brings in new elements into the field and overides the problem of super soldiers going awol.

Limor Wolf
19th February 2014, 15:31
A world that experiments on his animal cohabitants, a world that imitate that to human beings and a world that desires to intervene in what was naturally god-given, is a world where the twisted is the accepted and the accepted is the twisted. A world that is looking for ultimate solutions to the problems it itself created, might be a world in trouble and in great need, indeed.

Hervé
19th February 2014, 16:24
Glad to see that dots are being connected, one way or another!

There is unfortunately a problem in information communication, with groups having no idea of what technological advances are worked on by other groups and are already available... and that OP group which got their idea from "Avatar" would have known that, that technology had gone obsolete in the 50's... you know, the whole Robocop and Cyberdyne's Terminator killers... swap Cyberdyne for MKultra manufacturing super-spies/soldiers and one can get a picture of remote control first via human triggers, then via electronics... to end with AI generated remote commands via electromagnetic waves.

Read this article: First mind-reading implant gives rats telepathic power (http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23221-first-mindreading-implant-gives-rats-telepathic-power.html) and then read this thread to get an idea of what is already obsolete: Must Read: The Matrix Deciphered by Dr Robert Duncan (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?56002-Must-Read-The-Matrix-Deciphered-by-Dr-Robert-Duncan)