To All:

Another article of biological organisms being merged with a machine.  
Is this type of experiments ethical?

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>From NY Times Website


 Robot Has Biological Brain
 LiveScience Staff


Scientists have created a robot controlled by a biological brain made 
of rat neurons. 

 
The robot, named Gordon, is not exactly an Einstein but represents a 
remarkable bridging of the gap between biology and technology. Gordon 
relies a dish with about 60 electrodes to pick up electrical signals 
generated by the brain cells. 


The brain drives the robot's movements. 


Every time the robot nears an object, signals are directed to 
stimulate the brain by means of the electrodes, the researchers 
explained in a statement released today by the University of Reading 
in England. In response, the brain's output drives the robot's wheels 
left and right, so that it moves around in an attempt to avoid 
hitting objects. 


The robot has no additional control from a human or a computer, the 
scientists state. Its sole means of control is from its own brain. 


"This new research is tremendously exciting as firstly the biological 
brain controls its own moving robot body, and secondly it will enable 
us to investigate how the brain learns and memorizes its 
experiences," said the university's Kevin Warwick of the School of 
Systems Engineering. "This research will move our understanding 
forward of how brains work, and could have a profound effect on many 
areas of science and medicine." 


The researchers aim to get the robot to learn, by applying different 
signals as it moves into predefined positions. That might allow them 
to witness how memories manifest themselves in the brain when the 
robot revisits familiar territory. They hope the work will eventually 
lead to a better understanding of Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, stroke 
and brain injuries. 


"One of the fundamental questions that scientists are facing today is 
how we link the activity of individual neurons with the complex 
behaviors that we see in whole organisms," said Ben Whalley, a 
pharmacist at the university and member of the team that built 
Gordon. "This project gives us a really unique opportunity to look at 
something which may exhibit complex behaviors, but still remain 
closely tied to the activity of individual neurons. Hopefully we can 
use that to go some of the way to answer some of these very 
fundamental questions. " 


The project was funded by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences 
Research Council. 

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Original Story: Robot Has Biological Brain


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