Researchers have invented a mind-reading system that, for the first time in history, allows any person to type
words and phrases letter by letter, just by thinking. It all occurs in
real time, without moving a single muscle or uttering a single word.
This is an amazing invention. Not only it will help anyone with
serious motor disabilities, but it could potentially affect all of us in
an amazing way.
According to the researchers—Bettina Sorger, Joel Reithler, Brigitte
Dahmen, Rainer Goebel at Universiteit Maastricht's Faculty of Psychology
& Neuroscience Department of Neurocognition—this is the first
system that translates thoughts into letters in real time, allowing
"back-and-forth communication within a single scanning session."
Sorger and her colleagues—who were inspired by the work of Adrian Owen—claim
that this new system requires very little effort to setup, becoming
"immediately operational." They also say that it has a high application
potential "both in terms of diagnostics and establishing short-term
communication with nonresponsive and severely motor-impaired patients."
How does it work?
Their brain typing system uses functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) to analyze the hemodynamic responses in the brain—the movement
of blood inside our gray matter. These responses are caused by mental
images that get tied to each letter of the alphabet using computer
analysis algorithms.
Once the computer is up and running, the patient can freely type
letters, one after the other, using their brain. Each alphabet letter
corresponds to one of 27 "reliable and differentiable single-trial fMRI
signals."
Obviously, the decoding is not as fast typing with your fingers, but
it's a gigantic step towards achieving a natural brain to machine
interface. This has the potential of changing the way we interact with
technology in a dramatic way.
Between this and the particles that let you live without breathing, this week has been really wild for science. [Current Biology and University of Maastricht via Science Daily]
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