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Mind over Matter... done by monkeys!!

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  • 60'schild
    Silver Haired Silver Ager
    • Mar 27, 2009
    • 0

    Mind over Matter... done by monkeys!!

    Definitely weird...

    http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Monkey-Fitted-With-Hi-Tech-Chip-Moves-Robot-Using-Mind-Control-Thomas-Moore-Reports/Article/200907215336347?lpos=UK_News_News_Your_Way_Region_ 4&lid=NewsYourWay_ARTICLE_15336347_Monkey_Fitted_W ith_Hi-Tech_Chip_Moves_Robot_Using_Mind_Control%2C_Thomas _Moore_Reports


    9:01am UK, Monday July 13, 2009

    Thomas Moore, Health Correspondent
    A monkey fitted with a hi-tech brain chip has learned to move a complex robotic arm using mind control.

    The chip implant allows the monkey to manipulate the arm by thought

    The animal can operate the robot with such dexterity that it can reach out to grab, and turn a handle.

    The mechanical arm has an arm, elbow, wrist and simple hand, which the monkey controls with the power of thought.

    Sky News was given exclusive access to the laboratory at Pittsburgh University in the United States.

    The research is progressing so rapidly that scientists hope to start trials on paralysed patients within a year.

    Neurobiologist Dr Andy Schwartz said: "What we're trying to do is go to a very dextrous hand - where the functionality is very similar to the human hand. If we could help stroke patients there would be a huge market for this kind of device."

    Brain Chips

    They also hope to help patients who have been paralysed by spinal chord injuries or degenerative diseases of the nervous system.

    Electrodes implanted in the monkey's motor cortex, the brain's movement control centre, pick up pulses within individual neurones.

    The signals are relayed to a computer which analyses their pattern and strength to gauge what the monkey is trying to do. It then translates the signals to alter the speed and direction of the robotic arm.

    The system is so quick that if the arm overshoots the monkey's intended target, it can rapidly correct the movement.

    Dr Schwartz told Sky News: "It's pretty amazing because monkeys aren't used to moving tools.

    180 Rhesus macaque monkey

    Monkeys known for their intelligence

    "We use them all the time. Imagine you're moving your arm to get that piece of food. Conveying that to a monkey is pretty difficult, yet the monkey learns it fairly rapidly.

    "As the days go by, you see the monkeys start using it as if it is part of their own body."

    The monkey cannot feel the electrodes in its brain, and did not appear to be distressed by the wires leading from a socket on its head.

    At Brown University in New England, scientists have just started the first clinical trials of a similar device. Braingate allows tetraplegic patients to control a computer cursor by thinking about moving their paralysed hand.

    Matthew Nagel took part in the first tests of a prototype. Before he died of an unrelated infection, he described how the Braingate device gave him back some freedom.

    "I can't put it into words. I just use my brain. I said: 'cursor go up to the top right' and it did. And now I can control it all over the screen. It's wild," he said.

    The new trial will be on 15 patients. Scientists hope to prove that the technology is safe and effective enough to use on a wider scale.

    Head of the research, Professor John Donoghue, said the ultimate aim is for patients to regain control of their own limbs, which are more sophisticated than any robotic arm.

    He told Sky News: "Our goal with Braingate is to have a physical replacement for a broken biological nervous system.

    "So we'd like to have a physical system that senses what's going on in the brain, takes those signals inside your body and routes them off to the muscles, so when you think, you move.

    "That's just what you or I do, so one day you could be sitting here with a person and you wouldn't know if they had the system or not."


    The link above has photos of the monkey with the machine...
  • z3zep
    The Girl Next Door
    • Sep 30, 2006
    • 1725

    #2
    Poor little monkey....

    Comment

    • jessica
      fortune favors the bold
      • Nov 5, 2007
      • 4590

      #3
      Poor monkey. Great advance for science, though.
      Those who look outside dream. Those who look within awake.
      Samples of my work are found here: Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Happiness

      To do list:
      1:6 boots for Mathilda, 1:1 Romulan Commander outfit, Ursus helmet; Cornelius appliance
      1:9 scale ape's new suit for Cornelius;

      Comment

      • 60'schild
        Silver Haired Silver Ager
        • Mar 27, 2009
        • 0

        #4
        Hmmm.. when our cat can open the door to the pantry by himself and open his own can of catfood , THAT will be a really practical application of this technology.

        However, I'd be careful if he gets a hold of the credit card (and learns to use the phone).

        I can just see 200 cases of catfood being delivered to our front door!

        Comment

        • darklord1967
          Persistent Member
          • Mar 27, 2008
          • 1570

          #5
          Originally posted by jessica
          Poor monkey. Great advance for science, though.

          Take your stinking robotic arm off of me, you damned dirty ape!!!

          That was just for you Jess. Hee, hee, hee
          Last edited by darklord1967; Jul 15, '09, 5:48 AM.
          I... am an action figure customizer

          Comment

          • Seeker
            Neptunians RULE!
            • Feb 20, 2008
            • 1954

            #6
            Thats just what we need... bionic monkeys.

            I would love to see that poor little guy use it to grab one of the scientist and throttle him.
            Lo there do I see my Father.
            Lo there do I see my Mother and my Sisters and my Brothers.
            Lo there do I see the line of my people back to the begining.
            Lo they do call me.
            They bid me take my place among them.
            In the halls of Valhalla where the brave may live forever.

            Comment

            • 60'schild
              Silver Haired Silver Ager
              • Mar 27, 2009
              • 0

              #7
              The next thing you know, one of those monkeys will refuse to move the switch... He'll even say "NO" somehow... and then he'll urge his fuzzy brothers to revolt.

              See, we were all worried about Skynet forming and instead.... it'll be the apes ...

              Comment

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