steve dustcircle ⍻ · @dustcircle
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AI-powered brain implants help paralyzed patients communicate faster than ever - Enlarge / A researcher connects a pedestal on a study volunteer's head ... - arstechnica.com/?p=1963217

#ai #health #science #syndication #brainimplants

Last updated 1 year ago

Tech news from Canada · @TechNews
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Ars Technica: AI-powered brain implants help paralyzed patients communicate faster than ever arstechnica.com/?p=1963217

#Tech #arstechnica #it #technology #brainimplants #syndication #science #health #ai

Last updated 1 year ago

Steve Dustcircle ⍻ · @dustcircle
143 followers · 3389 posts · Server mastodon.cloud

( + BRAIN TECH) with Nita Farahany
podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0c

Machine poets. fails. Neurological surveillance. that treat . Is it scary? Cool? Let’s firehose some questions at Duke Law professor, neuro and bioethicist, author and TED speaker Dr. Nita Farahany. She explains the history of AI, the dawn of , what’s changed recently, the potential for good, the possible perils, how different lawmakers are stepping in...

#neurotechnology #ai #chatgpt #brainimplants #depression #chatbots

Last updated 1 year ago

Jack William Bell · @jackwilliambell
262 followers · 10351 posts · Server rustedneuron.com

> Meet the Folks Lining Up for Elon Musk’s Brain Implant. Neuralink Corp. has been cleared by the FDA to start human trials for its medical technology — and there's no shortage of potential volunteers. rollingstone.com/culture/cultu

Back in the 90's I was on a lot of con panels about . My joke at the time was I had three rules for :

1. Not made by Microsoft

2. Open Source only

3. I won't Beta-test

Nowadays? One rule: No fucking way and you can't make me!

#brainimplants #transhumanism #sff

Last updated 1 year ago

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Tech news from Canada · @TechNews
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IT News · @itnewsbot
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Neuralink says it has the FDA’s OK to start clinical trials - Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto)

In December 2022, founder Elon Musk gave a... - arstechnica.com/?p=1942466

#health #biology #science #medicine #elonmusk #neuralink #brainimplants

Last updated 1 year ago

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Winston Chiong · @winstonchiong
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Now in print (with great commentaries, below), our team’s on whether closed-loop that sense & modulate brain activity may alter users’ personalities and sense of self. While theoretical concerns have been raised by neuroethicists, our team is the first to ask patients with such implants. Their stories don’t support this concern, but raise novel ones.

🔓: tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.10

We studied patients receiving responsive neurostimulation for refractory . This is the first “closed-loop” brain modulation system in routine clinical practice. Patients were recruited before surgery, observed at clinic visits and followed over 1y post-op. In one remarkable case, we observed a seizure interrupted by the device mid-appointment:

Suddenly, the patient interrupted the conversation and with a distressed appearance asked if others in the room heard laughing voices. She cringed and covered her ears, and her caregiver and the medication-epileptologist comforted her. The medication-epileptologist asked the patient to repeat certain phrases to assess whether her speech was impaired and track the progress of the seizure. The RNS-epileptologist pointed out that he could activate the device stimulation to try to interrupt the seizure, and after a brief consultation with the medication-epileptologist proceeded to do so… As she struggled to find the right words to describe what she was hearing and feeling, the RNS-epileptologist continued to adjust device settings. After several minutes, she visibly calmed and then confidently and clearly announced that the seizure was over. Everyone in the room was relieved.

Unfortunately a subsequent interview revealed that seizure control and the patient’s excitement were not persistent:

Caregiver: – hallucinations started.
Patient: And I said, I think it’s coming back or something.
Caregiver: But by then your words were—your speech was really in the toilet.
Patient: Yeah, and that was kind of – I was – I just thought, no, not already; you know? I – because I – because I thought it was going to stay for – forever; you know?…I said to [caregiver], but, you know, it’s like when Christmas is over. It’s like when Christmas is over.

As others have noted, concerns about changed sense of self with must be evaluated in context of . Epilepsy itself significantly disrupts one’s sense of control, and many patients had experienced personality changes they attributed to meds.

A fascinating and unanticipated positive finding was how recorded data from the implanted device changed perceptions of illness. Patients and caregivers responded with great interest to the data; some were fascinated and others felt some unease:

That was definitely something else. Creepy. A heartbeat? I can watch a heartbeat, and I can feel the pulse for that image. But brainwaves? Watching brainwaves grossed me out… It’s because it’s mine. It’s creepy because it’s mine. If it was somebody else’s, it wouldn’t be as creepy. But, it’s because it’s mine.

In some cases, recorded data affirmed and elaborated on patients’ subjective experiences of illness; however, discordant data could call patients’ illness experiences into question. For some, the data supported an electrographic over an internal conception of their disease:

I used to think I could really tell the difference between an aura and a seizure. Especially if I didn’t have a blank out or anything… I have auras a lot and I don’t write them down, whereas I’ve written down every seizure that I’ve had, I think, for six years… I think maybe – and they call auras a seizure even though I feel like I can tell the difference. Now, I’m thinking that actually it can just be an aura and this device will record it as a seizure. So, probably I should write down every aura but I just have them a lot.

This has been an incredible project, long in the making. Major thanks to first-author Toby Haeusermann and the entire team, and of course to the patients, caregivers and clinicians who allowed us to observe in this intimate way.

#neuroethics #researchpaper #brainimplants #epilepsy #neurotech #chronicillness

Last updated 2 years ago

Antonio Lozano · @antoniolozano
144 followers · 31 posts · Server sigmoid.social

My first mastodon post!

Interested in and for the blind? Sharing our latest 🔥PRE-PRINT🔥"Biologically plausible phosphene simulation for
the differentiable optimization of visual cortical
prostheses" w Maureen van der Grinten,
@deRuyterJaap
et al. 1/

#neuralinterfaces #deeplearning #brainimplants

Last updated 2 years ago

Anna L. Davis · @annaldavis
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