The technology, often called a brain
computer interface, was conceived to enable people with paralysis and other
disabilities to interact with computers or control robotic arms, all by simply
thinking about such actions. Before long, these technologies could well be in
consumer electronics, too.
Some crude brain-reading products
already exist, letting people play easy games or move a mouse around a screen. Emotive
A brain computer interface, developed by Emotive.
Last year, a project called BrainGate
pioneered by Dr. Donoghue, enabled two people with full paralysis to use a
robotic arm with a computer responding to their brain activity. One woman, who
had not used her arms in 15 years, could grasp a bottle of coffee, serve
herself a drink and then return the bottle to a table. All done by imagining
the robotic arm’s movements.
But that chip inside the head could
soon vanish as scientists say we are poised to gain a much greater
understanding of the brain, and, in turn, technologies that empower brain
computer interfaces. An initiative by the Obama administration this year called
the Brain Activity Map project, a decade-long research project, aims to build a
comprehensive map of the brain.
Miyoung Chun, a molecular biologist and vice
president for science programs at the Kavli Foundation, is working on the project
and although she said it would take a decade to completely map the brain,
companies would be able to build new kinds of brain computer interface products
within two years.
“The Brain Activity Map will give
hardware companies a lot of new tools that will change how we use smartphones
and tablets,” Dr. Chun said. “It will revolutionize everything from robotic
implants and neural prosthetics, to remote controls, which could be history in
the foreseeable future when you can change your television channel by thinking
about it.”
There are some fears to be
addressed. On the Muse Web site, an F.A.Q. is devoted to
convincing customers that the device cannot siphon thoughts from people’s
minds.
These brain-reading technologies
have been the stuff of science fiction for decades.
In the 1982 movie “Firefox,” Clint
Eastwood plays a fighter pilot on a mission to the Soviet Union to steal a
prototype fighter jet that can be controlled by a brain neurolink. But Mr.
Eastwood has to think in Russian for the plane to work, and he almost dies when
he cannot get the missiles to fire during a dogfight. (Don’t worry, he
survives.)
Although we won’t be flying planes
with our minds anytime soon, surfing the Web on our smartphones might be
closer.
Dr. Donoghue of Brown said one of
the current techniques used to read people’s brains is called P300, in which a
computer can determine which letter of the alphabet someone is thinking about
based on the area of the brain that is activated when she sees a screen full of
letters. But even when advances in brain-reading technologies speed up, there
will be new challenges, as scientists will have to determine if the person
wants to search the Web for something in particular, or if he is just thinking
about a random topic.
By : Hermawan Candra Kusuma - 125150200111094
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