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martyr
2004-12-07, 04:03 PM
Cap Harnesses Human Thought to Move PC Cursor

Stefan Lovgren
for National Geographic News
December 7, 2004

Scientists have developed a non-invasive brain-computer interface that enables a person to move a cursor across a computer screen just by thinking about it.

The device resembles a swimming cap riddled with electrodes, which users wear against their scalp. The cap translates electrical signals in the brain to physical outputs, which govern the movement of a computer cursor.

The technology could enable people paralyzed by spinal cord injuries and strokes, for example, to control their brain activity in order to communicate via computer or to move mechanical devices.

Read the full story >>

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/12/images/041207_brain_interface.jpg
Image of computer screen cursor movements study participants executed by thought

Computer screen cursor movements made by four individuals who wore electrode caps, which analyzed electroencephalographic (EEG) activity, or brain waves, recorded from their scalp.

Before the new finding, many researchers previously assumed that only invasive brain-computer interfaces, in which electrodes are surgically implanted into the brain, could control complex movements.

"This shows that it may not be necessary to implant electrodes to gain multi-dimensional control," said Jonathan Wolpaw, a neurologist at the New York State Department of Health's Wadsworth Center in Albany. "It brings up a new non-invasive option in brain-computer interfaces."

Wolpaw directed the study, which is reported this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

New Motor Skills

Of the four people who participated in the study, two had severe physical disabilities.

The subjects wore the electrode caps, which analyzed electroencephalographic (EEG) activity (brain waves) recorded from their scalp. The electrodes, small metal disks about a quarter of an inch (three-fifths of a centimeter) wide, were placed over the sensory motor part of the brain.

At first, participants learned to use their thoughts to direct a cursor on a computer screen by imagining specific actions, from running to shooting baskets.

As they became more comfortable with the technology, the subjects began to rely less on such imagery to direct the cursor. Eventually, the participants couldn't tell what they were thinking about to move the cursor; they simply moved it.

"It becomes more like an instinctive, non-muscular skill," Wolpaw said. "What we're doing is giving the brain the opportunity to develop a new motor skill."

Each session lasted 24 minutes. It took participants two to three sessions to begin to acquire control of the cursor movement. After ten sessions, participants were able to hit the target on a computer screen about 80 percent of the time.

Adaptive Controllers

"[This is] compelling evidence that individuals can learn to control the spectral composition of their EEG, and that this allows them to exercise impressive control over the movement of a cursor displayed on a screen," said Emanuel Donchin, a psychology professor at the University of South Florida in Tampa.

The two study participants with spinal cord injuries performed better than the uninjured participants, possibly reflecting greater motivation or injury-associated brain changes.

The scientists could adjust the frequencies of the brain-wave signals they were analyzing based on a person's performance.

"The computer automatically adapts to the person using the system," Wolpaw said. "It is an interaction between two adaptive controllers�the system and the person using it."

Wolpaw predicts future improvements of the non-invasive brain-computer interface will focus on three-dimensional movement.

In the future, users may be able to operate a robotic arm that could pick things up, or they may be able to control a neural prosthesis in which electrodes implanted in a paralyzed limb may be stimulated to get the muscles to move.

Implanting Electrodes

There is a lively debate about the degree to which brain-computer interfaces need to implant electrodes so that neural activity can be recorded directly from the brain tissue.

Invasive brain-computer interfaces, in which electrodes are surgically implanted into the brain, have so far only been tested on monkeys. However Cyberkinetics, a neurotechnology company based in Foxborough, Massachusetts, has just initiated a study in which a human has been implanted with 80 electrodes.

Wolpaw said his study offers a strong non-invasive alternative. "If you can do as well or nearly as well with electrodes on the scalp as having them implanted in the brain, you might very well elect to do that," he said.

But scientists seem to agree that both invasive and non-invasive means of acquiring brain signals should continue to be developed, because both have potential benefits for different applications.

"For example, implanted brain-recording electrodes could be integrated with implanted stimulation systems that activate paralyzed muscles and generate useful movements," said Dawn Taylor, a biomedical engineering professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.

"In this way, a paralyzed person could once again move their arms and hands just by thinking of doing so," she said. "With implanted electrodes, the person would not need a caregiver to put on and maintain an external electrode cap in order to move their hands."

Taylor said Wolpaw's study is encouraging, because it shows that scientists can get a lot of useful information from relatively noisy, low-resolution, non-invasive brain readings.

"However, this suggests that we could get even better results if we apply similar adaptive training techniques in people implanted with higher resolution invasive electrodes," she said. "The good news is that severely paralyzed people will have multiple options for effectively controlling assistive devices using their brain activity."



http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/12/1207_041207_brain_interface.html

Triggar
2004-12-07, 04:15 PM
/me drops jaw

/me freaks out

Awesome

Kyonye
2004-12-07, 04:19 PM
thats cool but i could never wear one....i've got this thing where when i think of something, it repeats itself like a skipped CD and its kinda hard to get out of the loop. the cursor would be going back and forth non stop...i'd never get to what i need to.

Squeeky
2004-12-07, 04:20 PM
Fucking stick to mouses. God damn.

The MX Cordless Duo is gods gift to geeks.

DaShiznit
2004-12-07, 05:00 PM
Oh. My. God.

THAT IS SO SWEET! Imagine it. Just laying back, playing counterstrike, and THINKING about where you're going to aim. I'm just wondering, how do it know? I mean, being a teenager, I'm curious as to is I start thinking about sex (which is inevitable) will it automatically open up FireFox and go to a porn site? Hmm...the possibilities...

MattxMosh
2004-12-07, 05:05 PM
This is one step closer to teh Matrickz.

I LOVE IT.

internetn
2004-12-07, 05:52 PM
DUDE!!!11!! That fuckin Roxors My Boxers!1!!!11

Screw the games for a moment though, I got a uncle that was in a car accident, he for some reason can't do anything any more, hes like totaly paralyzed... Its weird, so I would love for him to get on paint, and tell me how he feels....

martyr
2004-12-07, 08:00 PM
imagine... IRC on direct brain interface.

MattxMosh
2004-12-07, 08:09 PM
imagine... IRC on direct brain interface.


/me shudders

Imagine the horrible things that would be said.

Ivan
2004-12-07, 08:19 PM
imagine... IRC on direct brain interface.


/me shudders

Imagine the horrible things that would be said.
It would be like Austin Powers when he first came out of cryogenic freezing. We all would have no inner monolog. :lol:

Triggar
2004-12-07, 08:23 PM
Screw the games for a moment though, I got a uncle that was in a car accident, he for some reason can't do anything any more, hes like totaly paralyzed... Its weird, so I would love for him to get on paint, and tell me how he feels....

http://img88.exs.cx/img88/3954/boobies3ie.png

martyr
2004-12-07, 08:24 PM
^she drew those with her head. i watched.

Ivan
2004-12-07, 08:30 PM
BOOBIES!!!!!!!!111oneShift+1

These Boobies are better...
http://www.nwf.org/expeditions/images/trip_pic_galapagos2.jpg

Back to the topic....

I saw something about this on TV this morning. Had to leave before it was over though... :(

Giovanni
2004-12-08, 12:48 AM
Resistance is futile, we will all be assimilated.

Squeeky
2004-12-08, 01:03 AM
/me shudders

Imagine the horrible things that would be said.

This is what my chat would look like

<Squeeky> Tits, ass, vagina, porn, ass, vagina, sex, blowjob, buttsechs, hamma naked, hamma, hamma, hamma, hamma, hamma, martyr riding a unicycle naked wearing a clownsuit and playing the trombone, sex, hamma, jennyboo naked, hamma banning me for previous comment.

martyr
2004-12-08, 08:54 AM
actually, trombone is one of the few brass instruments i can't play well - i'm a valves kinda guy.
not to mention the naked galavanting - i couldn't do that because i don't have enough fat, and i get cold really fast without clothes

JetRaiden
2004-12-08, 09:01 AM
if they make it look a little cooler then some goddamn swim cap I'll give it a try.

Fragmatic
2004-12-08, 10:48 AM
Here's the prototype -

http://img57.exs.cx/img57/4156/10pb.jpg

martyr
2004-12-08, 10:50 AM
ooh, lights. count me in

Fragmatic
2004-12-08, 10:53 AM
http://img57.exs.cx/img57/217/25st.jpg

oddfish
2004-12-08, 11:04 AM
mind control.. soon we'll all be Yuri's minions....
http://img93.exs.cx/img93/1497/itsatrap0017ca.jpg

Sabinius
2004-12-08, 02:36 PM
I dont beleive it works

Squeeky
2004-12-08, 02:56 PM
actually, trombone is one of the few brass instruments i can't play well - i'm a valves kinda guy.
not to mention the naked galavanting - i couldn't do that because i don't have enough fat, and i get cold really fast without clothes

But can you ride a unicycle?