Brain/machine interface progress
<div class="IPBDescription">And Ghost in the Shell get a little closer</div>A monkey was trained to make a robot walk on a treadmill.
The monkey was in North Carolina and the robot was in Japan.
<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/15/science/15robo.html?ex=1201150800&en=b5ef42933a1e1201&ei=5070&emc=eta1'" target="_blank">Article</a>
Personally, this makes me pretty happy, but I'd like to hear the general sentiment towards brain/machine interfaces on these boards.
The monkey was in North Carolina and the robot was in Japan.
<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/15/science/15robo.html?ex=1201150800&en=b5ef42933a1e1201&ei=5070&emc=eta1'" target="_blank">Article</a>
Personally, this makes me pretty happy, but I'd like to hear the general sentiment towards brain/machine interfaces on these boards.
Comments
Correct me if i'm wrong, but isn't the upshot of this that when we find a safe way to put electrodes into human brains, we'll pretty much be able to add thought-controlled robotic limbs to ourselves, and learn to control them like a normal limb <i>within an hour.</i>
Sign me up for Doc-Oc style tentacles please.
There has been ~3-4 years worth of "MONKEY CONTROLS MACHINE WITH BRAIN" stuff popping up online and in newspapers and magazines and stuff. I'll get excited about it when it's anything more than a freaking monkey controlling another freaking robot. Get me into the equation. Let me control the robot! Or the monkey, I don't care.
Hah, I can do that <i>without</i> a computer!
What if the robot was 1000 feet tall?
Or the monkey?
But you don't have lock-in syndrome unfortunately.
<!--quoteo(post=1667821:date=Jan 18 2008, 12:09 PM:name=Thaldarin)--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Thaldarin @ Jan 18 2008, 12:09 PM) <a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=1667821"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->Until I can use my brain to control another human, I don't find it a technological advance.<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
You should learn how to be persuasive in that case, or buy Chloroform.
There is this video on youtube where an old chinese man had electrodes or whatever they're called attached to his legs and arms. Then they put his old ass in an exoskeleton and applauded as he lifted 250lbs of rice with ease.
250lbs of rice <img src="style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/confused-fix.gif" style="vertical-align:middle" emoid="???" border="0" alt="confused-fix.gif" />
pfff, If he had lifted 250lbs of hardened steel, that would have been impressive.
On the surface of Jupiter, YES!
(See what I did there?)
(See what I did there?)<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
No, please enligthen us our powerful one.