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Как нынче с нейроинтерфейсами прогресс? Скоро ли можно будет избавиться от клавиатур в том или ином виде?
>>177505Довольно неплохо. Габен как-то упоминал, что всё оказалось сильно проще, чем он предполагал, но новостей об актуальном прогрессе давно не поступало. Через пару лет ожидается бурное развитие дополненной реальности, может, под это дело и bci что-нибудь перепадёт
>>177508А пока можно поспорить, что изображено на фотографии - дрель или шуруповёрт
>>177508>Personally, the area I’m spending a lot of time on has been growing out of a bunch of research that occurred a while ago in brain-computer interfaces. And I think that’s kind of long-lead stuff. That’s kind of the background thread that I get pulled back into when other things aren’t demanding my attention.>In the brain-computer stuff, we’re way closer to ‘the Matrix’ than people realize. It’s not going to be The Matrix […] it’s a movie that misses all the interesting technical subtleties and just how weird the post brain-computer interface world is going to be. It’s going to have a huge impact on the kinds of experiences that we can create for people.>I think connecting to people’s motor cortex and visual cortex is going to be way easier than people expected and doing things like […] reading and writing to somebody’s motor cortex is way more of a tractable problem than making people feel ‘cold’. And you never would have guessed that. And I never would have guessed that before going into it. It turns out your brain has really good interfaces for some things and really badly designed, kludgy interfaces for doing other things. And the fact that your immune system gets involved in your perception of temperature means there’s all sorts of weird parts of your brain that participate in the sensation of being cold, whereas your motor cortex [or] your visual cortex are much more tractable problems.>It’s an extinction-level event for every entertainment form that’s not thinking about [BCI]. If you’re in the entertainment business and you’re not thinking about this, you’re going to be thinking a lot more about it in the future.
>>177508
>Personally, the area I’m spending a lot of time on has been growing out of a bunch of research that occurred a while ago in brain-computer interfaces. And I think that’s kind of long-lead stuff. That’s kind of the background thread that I get pulled back into when other things aren’t demanding my attention.>In the brain-computer stuff, we’re way closer to ‘the Matrix’ than people realize. It’s not going to be The Matrix […] it’s a movie that misses all the interesting technical subtleties and just how weird the post brain-computer interface world is going to be. It’s going to have a huge impact on the kinds of experiences that we can create for people.>I think connecting to people’s motor cortex and visual cortex is going to be way easier than people expected and doing things like […] reading and writing to somebody’s motor cortex is way more of a tractable problem than making people feel ‘cold’. And you never would have guessed that. And I never would have guessed that before going into it. It turns out your brain has really good interfaces for some things and really badly designed, kludgy interfaces for doing other things. And the fact that your immune system gets involved in your perception of temperature means there’s all sorts of weird parts of your brain that participate in the sensation of being cold, whereas your motor cortex [or] your visual cortex are much more tractable problems.>It’s an extinction-level event for every entertainment form that’s not thinking about [BCI]. If you’re in the entertainment business and you’re not thinking about this, you’re going to be thinking a lot more about it in the future.
https://habr.com/ru/news/t/511994/
>>177570Интересно, как у этих штук с апгрейдами. Поначалу технология будет слишком быстро развиваться, чтобы идти в первых рядах.
>>177572Думаю что как со сменой батареек в кардиостимуляторах.
>>177574При замене батареек кардиостимулятора разве нужно его переподключать? Вопрос в том, как быстро мозг восстановит повреждения от установки предыдущей версии устройства. Хотя, наверное, можно ими всю голову истыкать прежде, чем будет ощутимый урон
>>177575Не знаю как конкретно будет в neuralink, но обычно просто накладывают на мозг контактную пластину с матрицей электродов а не втыкают что-то в глубину тканей.
>>177577Насколько я понял, neuralink является именно заменой матрицы с электродами
>>177579В таком случае мне самому инетерсно что же они там придумали.
>>177581Пока только в общих чертах: https://www.technologyreview.com/2019/07/18/134144/neuralink-whats-new-and-what-isnt-elon-musks-brain-computer-interface/
>>177508Есть основания ему доверять, потому что с обезьянами уже успешно проделывали: https://youtu.be/fY1aJmVV4pU?t=2440
Мне эта картинка с обезьянами напоминают virgin vs chad
https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1288889018512367616>Will show neurons firing in real-time on August 28th. The matrix in the matrix.
https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1288889018512367616
>Will show neurons firing in real-time on August 28th. The matrix in the matrix.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVvmgjBL74w>In a presentation showing the latest developments on Neuralink’s brain-computer interface, Elon Musk revealed that the company has implanted prototype devices in live pigs, and was able to achieve rudimentary limb-tracking by monitoring activity in the brain.>Neuralink revealed that it has already been implating the device into live pigs to demonstrate that the procedure is safe and that Link can be removed if necessary without causing any lasting brain damage, according to the company.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVvmgjBL74w
>In a presentation showing the latest developments on Neuralink’s brain-computer interface, Elon Musk revealed that the company has implanted prototype devices in live pigs, and was able to achieve rudimentary limb-tracking by monitoring activity in the brain.
>Neuralink revealed that it has already been implating the device into live pigs to demonstrate that the procedure is safe and that Link can be removed if necessary without causing any lasting brain damage, according to the company.
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