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March 01, 2013

Rats thousands of miles apart collaborate on simple tasks with their brains connected through the internet

Ian Sample in The Guardian:

ScreenHunter_128 Mar. 01 19.14Scientists have connected the brains of a pair of animals and allowed them to share sensory information in a major step towards what the researchers call the world's first "organic computer".

The US team fitted two rats with devices called brain-to-brain interfaces that let the animals collaborate on simple tasks to earn rewards, such as a drink of water.

In one radical demonstration of the technology, the scientists used theinternet to link the brains of two rats separated by thousands of miles, with one in the researchers' lab at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, and the other in Natal, Brazil.

Led by Miguel Nicolelis, a pioneer of devices that allow paralysed people to control computers and robotic arms with their thoughts, the researchers say their latest work may enable multiple brains to be hooked up to share information.

"These experiments showed that we have established a sophisticated, direct communication linkage between brains," Nicolelis said in a statement. "Basically, we are creating what I call an organic computer."

The scientists first demonstrated that rats can share, and act on, each other's sensory information by electrically connecting their brains via tiny grids of electrodes that reach into the motor cortex, the brain region that processes movement.

The rats were trained to press a lever when a light went on above it. When they performed the task correctly, they got a drink of water. To test the animals' ability to share brain information, they put the rats in two separate compartments. Only one compartment had a light that came on above the lever. When the rat pressed the lever, an electronic version of its brain activity was sent directly to the other rat's brain. In trials, the second rat responded correctly to the imported brain signals 70% of the time by pressing the lever.

More here.

Posted by S. Abbas Raza at 01:15 PM | Permalink

Comments

Anyone else get a little dizzy thinking about the implications of this?
God I hope I am still alive to see where this all (potentially) goes.
I should quit beer.

Posted by: DrunktankDan | Mar 1, 2013 1:38:48 PM

Where does it go. One word. Borg.

Posted by: Robin | Mar 1, 2013 4:30:10 PM

"...established a sophisticated, direct communication linkage between brains". This is incredibly misleading. Sure, there is information, but we have no idea what that information is. All he is doing is recording broadband data from one mouse and stimulating the other mouse in the same brain region (somatosensory cortex in this case) after he applies a seemingly arbitrary transformation to the input. This is no different than deep-brain stimulation, which is used to treat symptoms of Parkinson's disease for example. We have no idea what we are doing, all we know is that the brain somehow knows how make use of this information. Also the fact that they are miles apart is completely irrelevant. Publications like this are a publicity stunt and nothing more.

Posted by: Artur | Mar 1, 2013 5:52:21 PM

Channeling, table-tilting, calling the the phone numbers of departed relatives just in case, bilocation, and psychokinesis are all much, much better than this. Am I supposed to be impressed that somebody is smart enough to make this happen? No. But I would be impressed if having thought of it they were smart enough not to pursue it.

Posted by: Elatia Harris | Mar 2, 2013 1:17:46 AM

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