S.o.'s kindly posted one full article and link to the other:

November 12, 2008
Jacking into the Brain--Is the Brain the Ultimate Computer Interface?
How far can science advance brain-machine interface technology? Will we
one day pipe the latest blog entry or NASCAR highlights directly into
the human brain as if the organ were an outsize flash drive?
By Gary Stix

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Bill Diodato

The cyberpunk science fiction that emerged in the 1980s routinely
paraded "neural implants" for hooking a computing device
directly to the brain: "I had hundreds of megabytes stashed in my
head," proclaimed the protagonist of "Johnny Mnemonic," a
William Gibson story that later became a wholly forgettable movie
starring Keanu Reeves.

The genius of the then emergent genre (back in the days when a megabyte
could still wow) was its juxtaposition of low-life retro culture with
technology that seemed only barely beyond the capabilities of the
deftest biomedical engineer. Although the implants could not have been
replicated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology or the
California Institute of Technology, the best cyberpunk authors gave the
impression that these inventions might yet materialize one day, perhaps
even in the reader's own lifetime.

In the past 10 years, however, more realistic approximations of
technologies originally evoked in the cyberpunk literature have made
their appearance. A person with electrodes implanted inside his brain
has used neural signals alone to control a prosthetic arm, a prelude to
allowing a human to bypass limbs immobilized by amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis or stroke. Researchers are also investigating how to send
electrical messages in the other direction as well, providing feedback
that enables a primate to actually sense what a robotic arm is touching.

But how far can we go in fashioning replacement parts for the brain and
the rest of the nervous system? Besides controlling a computer cursor or
robot arm, will the technology somehow actually enable the brain's
roughly 100 billion neurons to function as a clandestine repository for
pilfered industrial espionage data or another plot element borrowed from
Gibson?

Will Human Become Machine?
Today's Hollywood scriptwriters and futurists, less skilled heirs of
the original cyberpunk tradition, have embraced these neurotechnologies.
The Singularity Is Near, scheduled for release next year, is a film
based on the ideas of computer scientist Ray Kurzweil, who has posited
that humans will eventually achieve a form of immortality by
transferring a digital blueprint of their brain into a computer or
robot.

Yet the dream of eternity as a Max Headroom–like avatar trapped
inside a television set (or as a copy-and-paste job into the latest
humanoid bot) remains only slightly less distant than when René
Descartes ruminated on mind-body dualism in the 17th century. The
wholesale transfer of self—a machine-based facsimile of the
perception of the ruddy hues of a sunrise, the constantly shifting
internal emotional palette and the rest of the mix that combines to
evoke the uniquely subjective sense of the world that constitutes the
essence of conscious life—is still nothing more than a prop for
fiction writers.

Hoopla over thought-controlled prostheses, moreover, obscures the lack
of knowledge of the underlying mechanisms of neural functioning needed
to feed information into the brain to re-create a real-life cyberpunk
experience. "We know very little about brain circuits for higher
cognition," says Richard A. Andersen, a neuroscientist at Caltech.

What, then, might realistically be achieved by interactions between
brains and machines? Do the advances from the first EEG experiment to
brain-controlled arms and cursors suggest an inevitable, deterministic
progression, if not toward a Kurzweilian singularity, then perhaps
toward the possibility of inputting at least some high-level cognitive
information into the brain? Could we perhaps download War and Peace or,
with a nod to The Matrix, a manual of how to fly a
helicopter? How about inscribing the sentence "See Spot run"
into the memory of someone who is unconscious of the transfer? How about
just the word "see"?

These questions are not entirely academic, although some wags might muse
that it would be easier just to buy a pair of reading glasses and do
things the old-fashioned way. Even if a pipeline to the cortex remains
forever a figment of science fiction, an understanding of how photons,
sound waves, scent molecules and pressure on the skin get translated
into lasting memories will be more than mere cyberpunk entertainment. A
neural prosthesis built from knowledge of these underlying processes
could help stroke victims or Alz­heimer's patients form new
memories.

Primitive means of jacking in already reside inside the skulls of
thousands of people. Deaf or profoundly hearing-impaired individuals
carry cochlear implants that stimulate the auditory nerve with sounds
picked up by a microphone—a device that neuroscientist Michael S.
Gaz­zaniga of the University of California, Santa Barbara, has
characterized as the first successful neuroprosthesis in humans. Arrays
of electrodes that serve as artificial retinas are in the laboratory. If
they work, they might be tweaked to give humans night vision.

The more ambitious goal of linking Amazon.com directly to the
hippocampus, a neural structure involved with forming memories, requires
technology that has yet to be invented. The bill of particulars would
include ways of establishing reliable connections between neurons and
the extracranial world—and a means to translate a digital version of
War and Peace into the language that neurons use to communicate with one
another. An inkling of how this might be done can be sought by examining
leading work on brain-machine interfaces.

Your Brain on Text
Jacking text into the brain requires consideration of whether to insert
electrodes directly into tissue, an impediment that might make neural
implants impractical for anyone but the disabled. As has been known for
nearly a century, the brain's electrical activity can be detected
without cracking bone. What looks like a swimming cap studded with
electrodes can transmit signals from a paralyzed patient, thereby
enabling typing of letters on a screen or actual surfing of the Web.
Niels Birbaumer of the University of Tübingen in Germany, a leading
developer of the technology, asserts that trial-and-error stimulation of
the cortex using a magnetic signal from outside the skull, along with
the electrode cap to record which neurons are activated, might be able
to locate the words "see" or "run." Once mapped, these
areas could be fired up again to evoke those memories—at least in
theory.

Some neurotechnologists think that if particular words reside in
specific spots in the brain (which is debatable), finding those spots
would probably require greater precision than is afforded by a wired
swim cap. One of the ongoing experiments with invasive implants could
possibly lead to the needed fine-level targeting. Philip R. Kennedy of
Neural Signals and his colleagues designed a device that records the
output of neurons. The hookup lets a stroke victim send a signal,
through thought alone, to a computer that interprets it as, say, a
vowel, which can then be vocalized by a speech synthesizer, a step
toward forming whole words. This type of brain-machine interface might
also eventually be used for activating individual neurons.

Still more precise hookups might be furnished by nanoscale fibers,
measuring 100 nanometers or less in diameter, which could easily tap
into single neurons because of their dimensions and their electrical and
mechanical properties. Jun Li of Kansas State University and his
colleagues have crafted a brushlike structure in which nano­fiber
bristles serve as electrodes for stimulating or receiving neural
signals. Li foresees it as a way to stimulate neurons to allay
Parkinson's disease or depression, to control a prosthetic arm or
even to flex astronauts' muscles during long spaceflights to prevent
the inevitable muscle wasting that occurs in zero gravity.

Learning the Language
Fulfilling the fantasy of inputting a calculus text—or even plugging
in Traveler's French before going on vacation—would require far
deeper insight into the brain signals that encode language and other
neural representations.

Unraveling the neural code is one of the most imposing challenges in
neuroscience—and, to misappropriate Freud, would likely pave a royal
road to an understanding of consciousness. Theorists have advanced many
differing ideas to explain how the billions of neurons and trillions of
synapses that connect them can ping meaningful messages to one another.
The oldest is that the code corresponds to the rate of firing of the
voltage spikes generated by a neuron.

Whereas the rate code may suffice for some stimuli, it might not be
enough for booting a Marcel Proust or a Richard Feynman, supplying a
mental screen capture of a madeleine cake or the conceptual abstraction
of a textbook of differential equations. More recent work has focused on
the precise timing of the intervals between each spike (temporal codes)
and the constantly changing patterns of how neurons fire together
(population codes).

Some help toward downloading to the brain might come from a decadelong
endeavor to build an artificial hippocampus to help people with memory
deficits, which may have the corollary benefit of helping researchers
gain insights into the coding process. A collaboration between the
University of Southern California and Wake Forest University has worked
to fashion a replacement body part for this memory-forming brain
structure. The hippocampus, seated deep within the brain's temporal
lobe, sustains damage in stroke or Alzheimer's. An electronic bypass
of a damaged hippocampus could restore the ability to create new
memories. The project, funded by the National Science Foundation and the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, might eventually go further,
enhancing normal memory or helping to deduce the particular codes needed
for high-­level cognition.

The two groups—led by Theodore W. Berger at U.S.C. and Samuel
Deadwyler at Wake Forest—are preparing a technical paper showing
that an artificial hippocampus took over from the biological organ the
task of consolidating a rat's memory of pressing a lever to receive
a drop of water. Normally the hippocampus emits signals that are relayed
to cortical areas responsible for storing the long-term memory of an
experience. For the experiment, a chemical temporarily incapacitated the
hippocampus. When the rat pressed the correct bar, electrical input from
sensory and other areas of the cortex were channeled through a
microchip, which, the scientists say, dispatched the same signals the
hippocampus would have sent. A demonstration that an artificial device
mimicked hippocampal output would mark a step toward deducing the
underlying code that could be used to create a memory in the motor
cortex—and perhaps one day to unravel ciphers for even higher-level
behaviors.

If the codes for the sentence "See Spot run"—or perhaps an
entire technical manual—could be ascertained, it might, in theory,
be possible to input them directly to an electrode array in the
hippocampus (or cortical areas), evoking the scene in The Matrix in
which instructions for flying a helicopter are downloaded by cell phone.
Artificial hippocampus research postulates a scenario only slightly more
prosaic. "The kinds of examples [the U.S. Department of Defense]
likes to typically use are coded information for flying an F-15,"
says Berger.

The seeming simplicity of the model of neural input envisaged by
artificial hippocampus-related studies may raise more questions than it
answers. Would such an implant overwrite existing memories? Would the
code for the sentence "See Spot run" be the same for me as it is
for you or, for that matter, a native Kurdish speaker? Would the
hippocampal codes merge cleanly with other circuitry that provides the
appropriate context, a semantic framework, for the sentence? Would
"See Spot run" be misinterpreted as a laundry mishap instead of
a trotting dog?

Some neuroscientists think the language of the brain may not be
deciphered until understanding moves beyond the reading of mere voltage
spikes. "Just getting a lot of signals and trying to understand what
these signals mean and correlating them with particular behavior is not
going to solve it," notes Henry Markram, director of neuroscience
and technology at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne.
A given input into a neuron or groups of neurons can produce a
particular output—conversion of sensory inputs to long-term memory
by the hippocampus, for instance—through many different pathways.
"As long as there are lots of different ways to do it, you're
not even close," he says.

The Blue Brain Project, which Markram heads, is an attempt that began in
2005 to use supercomputer-based simulations to reverse-engineer the
brain at the molecular and cellular levels—modeling first the
simpler rat organ and then the human version to unravel the underlying
function of neural processes. The latter task awaits a computer that
boasts a more than 1,000-fold improvement over the processing power of
current supercomputers. The actual code, when it does emerge, may be
structured very differently from what appears in today's textbooks.
"I think there will be a conceptual breakthrough that will have
significant implications for how we think of reality," Markram says.
"It will be quite a profound thing. That's probably why it's
such an intractable problem."

The challenge involved in figuring out how to move information into the
brain suggests a practical foreseeable limit for how far neurotechnology
might be advanced. The task of forming the multitude of connections that
make a memory is vastly different from magnetizing a set of bits on a
hard disk. "Complex information like the contents of a book would
require the interactions of a very large number of brain cells over a
very large area of the nervous system," observes neuroscientist John
P. Donoghue of Brown University. "Therefore, you couldn't
address all of them, getting them to store in their connections the
correct kind of information. So I would say based on current knowledge,
it's not possible."

Writing to the brain may remain a dream lost in cyberspace. But the
seeming impossibility does not make Donoghue less sanguine about
ultimate expectations for feeding information the other way and
developing brain-controlled prostheses for the severely disabled. He has
been a leader in studies to implant an array of multiple electrodes into
the brain that can furnish a direct line from the cortex to a prosthetic
arm or even a wheelchair.

Donoghue predicts that in the next five years brain-machine interfaces
will let a paralyzed person pick up a cup and take a drink of water and
that, in some distant future, these systems might be further refined so
that a person with an upper spinal cord injury might accomplish the
unthinkable, perhaps even playing a game of basketball with prosthetics
that would make a reality of The Six Million Dollar Man, the 1970s
television series. Even without an information pipeline into the brain,
disabled patients and basic researchers might still reap the benefits of
lesser substitutes. Gert Pfurtscheller of the Graz University of
Technology in Austria and his colleagues reported last year on a patient
with a spinal cord injury who was able, merely by thinking, to traverse
a virtual environment, moving from one end to the other of a simulated
street. Duke University's Miguel A. L. Nicolelis, another pioneer in
brain-machine interfaces, has begun to explore how monkeys connected to
brain-controlled prosthetic devices begin to develop a kinesthetic
awareness, a sense of movement and touch, that is completely separate
from sensory inputs into their biological bodies. "There's some
physiological evidence that during the experiment they feel more
connected to the robots than to their own bodies," he says.

The most important consequences of these investigations may be something
other than neural implants and robotic arms. An understanding of central
nervous system development acquired by the Blue Brain Project or another
simulation may let educators understand the best ways to teach children
and determine at what point a given pedagogical technique should be
applied. "You can build an educational development program that is
engineered to, in the shortest possible time, allow you to acquire
certain capabilities," Markram says. If he is right, research on
neural implants and brain simulations will produce more meaningful
practical benefits than dreams of the brain as a flash drive drawn from
20th-century science-fiction literature.

Note: This article was originally published with the title, "Jacking
Into the Brain".
Further Reading
* Putting Thoughts into Action: Implants Tap the Thinking Brain
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=putting-thoughts-into-action>
* Taming Vessels to Treat Cancer
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=taming-vessels-cancer-tumors>
* Repairing the Damaged Spinal Cord
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=repairing-the-damaged-spinal-cord>
* Ballot Initiatives: States decriminalize pot, nix abortion limits...
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=ballot-initiatives-states-decrimina\
lize-pot-nix-abortion-limits>

* Cancer Vaccine: Looking Beyond Tumor Size
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=cancer-vaccine-looking-beyond>
* Open-Source Thinking Revolutionizes Prosthetic Limbs
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=open-source-thinking> *
Science Questions for Would-Be Presidents
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=science-questions-would-be-presiden\
ts> * All Together Now: Unleashing the Web's Synergistic
Possibilities <http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=all-together-now>

Source: Scientific American
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=jacking-into-the-brain&=WR_20081112
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=jacking-into-the-brain&sc=WR_200811\
12>





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