Brain Implants
from the lousy-idea dept
Interesting article by MIT's Michael Dertouzos on why brain implants are a lousy idea. Makes for some interesting reading, though the arguments are all pretty obvious. Sensory overload. Difficulty in understanding how to express complex concepts in simple electrical impulses etc.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Brain implants
As far as communicating abstract concepts, I'd be satisfied with simple recording and playback of sensory data, simulating sight, taste, touch, etc. There are several movies (some good, some stinky) that explore this stuff, like Brainstorm, Strange Days, and eXistenZ.
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I wonder, however, what it would mean for learning in general. Would people "learn" in a completely different manner. Would they become reliant on the data supplied through the brain implants? One of the coolest things about learning is understanding how to infer something. Does that go away, when we can simply access the grand master database of all information with a simple eye blink?
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On the other hand, if you could just intercept sensory data before it gets processed into memory, then record and play that back, you could do some really cool things. Imaging having astronauts equiped with recorders during a Mars landing and being able to simulate a first hand experience here on Earth. Cool.
P.S. Love the site.
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I guess I'm just a little nervous of using such a system to enforce a "group think" mentality. Everyone else reacts like "so", therefore, I must react like "so".
Anyway, thanks for the encouraging words about the site. Please let anyone else you know who might like it know about it. We rely solely on word of mouth these days.
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One more thing I agree with you on, and that is this site.. really love it!!!!
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Very far into the future I can see it being possible to transmit your own thoughts to another person via a device of some kind but this would almost have to be custom made as no two brains are laid out in the same way.
As far as sensory overload is concerned, I think it depends on the person. Take a librarian for example, I doubt this person would react well it they were placed in to a combat situation in an advanced fighter jet. Fighter pilots, however, can handle this situation quite well. Perhaps it is a matter of getting accustomed to the way information is presented to you. After time and training you will get used to it. I am sure you could find a way to shut it down or reduce it in some way. The quickest way to stop yourself from getting sick from looking at a disgusting sight is to shut your eyes. Your body does this anyway as you sleep. Taste, smell, touch, and sight are all ignored when you sleep unless a certain limit is met and you awaken with a jolt. Hearing remains active though reduced.
I think it will all come to pass soon, but not before some very important discoveries about the physiological aspects of the human thought process are made.
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thanks
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Interesting (if skewed) perspective this guy has..
Um. What is this, Ethernet? Everyone's thoughts are not going to be streaming through your head all the time, at least in a well-designed system. Plus, there would have to be a way to shut it out... which would neatly take care of our 'need for isolation'.
I get the impression that the author is equating the notion of a brain implant with telepathy. I would think of it more like an internal computer (which, I suppose, it would be). Just like an ordinary PC, it could enhance our thought processes, if in a much more direct manner... and, when we wanted to, we could use it to communicate with other people.
As to his final point: certainly, there are people who won't want to have one of these shoved into their skulls. In fact, I will be one of those people until brain implantation becomes a mature technology. (Which will probably not take place within my lifetime, but oh well.) But by his logic, since there are people who don't believe in using modern technology, everything from the internal combustion engine to the microprocessor is a 'lousy idea!'
I'm sure I had a point around here, but I seem to have lost it. =^) I guess what I'm trying to say is that anything looks like a 'lousy idea' from a certain angle, but that doesn't make it inherently bad.
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No Subject Given
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lousy idea department
This ‘article’ was followed by several days of replies and comments, and right up until 2003, you were publishing entries on brain implants.
My question is, Does anyone know the name of the student who originally approached Michael Dertouzos with this “lousy idea”?
The article which Dertouzos published on the internet http://www.lcs.mit.edu/about/brainimplants.html) says only: “a young man approached me and said “What I really want is a brain implant so that I can move massive amounts of information rapidly and painlessly in and out of my head.” Unfortunately Dertouzos died in 2001 so I can’t ask him who the student was.
Mike, if you or any of your readers know, please help me out.
Thank you, Caro Beveridge
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unofficial cranial rape via brain implantation
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Interesting brain implants
More interesting, when we put psychosurgery and brain implants on our search engine, we end up with manchurian candidate developmental research.
Any of Hoffman's patients survive this covert human experimentation?
Terry Parker Jr./ aka Robertson
http://www.geocities.com/terryparkerjr/
http://www.ontariocourts.on.ca/decisions/2000/ju ly/parker.htm
http://www.cyberclass.net/turmel/timeline.htm
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