Date: 29/12/2015 02:44:45
From: JTQ
ID: 821303
Subject: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

Matrix-style memory prosthesis set to supercharge human brain

Human memory is about to get supercharged. A memory prosthesis being trialled next year could not only restore long-term recall but may eventually be used to upload new skills directly to the brain – just like in the film The Matrix.

The first trials will involve people with epilepsy. Seizures can sometimes damage the hippocampus, causing the brain to lose its ability to form long-term memories. To repair this ability, Theodore Berger at the University of Southern California and his colleagues used electrodes already implanted in people’s brains as part of epilepsy treatment to record electrical activity associated with memory.

The team then developed an algorithm that could predict the neural activity thought to occur when a short-term memory becomes a long-term memory, as it passes through the hippocampus.

Early next year, Berger’s team will use this algorithm to instruct the electrodes to predict and then mimic the activity that should occur when long-term memories are formed. “Hopefully, it will repair their long-term memory,” says Berger. Previous studies using animals suggest that the prosthesis might even give people a better memory than they could expect naturally.

A similar approach could eventually be used to implant new memories into the brain. Berger’s team recorded brain activity in a rat that had been trained to perform a specific task. The memory prosthesis then replicated that activity in a rat that hadn’t been trained. The second rat was able to learn the task much faster than the first rat – as if it already had some memory of the task.

“There is good reason to believe that the sharing of memory can happen,” says Berger.

Ref: New Scientist

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Date: 29/12/2015 04:25:54
From: PermeateFree
ID: 821307
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

JTQ said:


Matrix-style memory prosthesis set to supercharge human brain

Human memory is about to get supercharged. A memory prosthesis being trialled next year could not only restore long-term recall but may eventually be used to upload new skills directly to the brain – just like in the film The Matrix.

The first trials will involve people with epilepsy. Seizures can sometimes damage the hippocampus, causing the brain to lose its ability to form long-term memories. To repair this ability, Theodore Berger at the University of Southern California and his colleagues used electrodes already implanted in people’s brains as part of epilepsy treatment to record electrical activity associated with memory.

The team then developed an algorithm that could predict the neural activity thought to occur when a short-term memory becomes a long-term memory, as it passes through the hippocampus.

Early next year, Berger’s team will use this algorithm to instruct the electrodes to predict and then mimic the activity that should occur when long-term memories are formed. “Hopefully, it will repair their long-term memory,” says Berger. Previous studies using animals suggest that the prosthesis might even give people a better memory than they could expect naturally.

A similar approach could eventually be used to implant new memories into the brain. Berger’s team recorded brain activity in a rat that had been trained to perform a specific task. The memory prosthesis then replicated that activity in a rat that hadn’t been trained. The second rat was able to learn the task much faster than the first rat – as if it already had some memory of the task.

“There is good reason to believe that the sharing of memory can happen,” says Berger.

Ref: New Scientist

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Date: 29/12/2015 09:34:49
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 821343
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

JTQ said:


Matrix-style memory prosthesis set to supercharge human brain
The first trials will involve people with epilepsy. Seizures can sometimes damage the hippocampus, causing the brain to lose its ability to form long-term memories. To repair this ability, Theodore Berger at the University of Southern California and his colleagues used electrodes already implanted in people’s brains as part of epilepsy treatment to record electrical activity associated with memory.

The team then developed an algorithm that could predict the neural activity thought to occur when a short-term memory becomes a long-term memory, as it passes through the hippocampus.

Early next year, Berger’s team will use this algorithm to instruct the electrodes to predict and then mimic the activity that should occur when long-term memories are formed. “Hopefully, it will repair their long-term memory,” says Berger. Previous studies using animals suggest that the prosthesis might even give people a better memory than they could expect naturally.

A similar approach could eventually be used to implant new memories into the brain. Berger’s team recorded brain activity in a rat that had been trained to perform a specific task. The memory prosthesis then replicated that activity in a rat that hadn’t been trained. The second rat was able to learn the task much faster than the first rat – as if it already had some memory of the task.

“There is good reason to believe that the sharing of memory can happen,” says Berger.

That is absolutely brilliant. I wish I’d anticipated that. Use of only a couple of electrodes ought to be extremely limited, so I’m startled that it works at all.

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Date: 29/12/2015 10:01:37
From: transition
ID: 821348
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

>“There is good reason to believe that the sharing of memory can happen,” says Berger.

there’re good reasons to believe the sharing of memory already happen

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Date: 29/12/2015 10:10:55
From: transition
ID: 821350
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

Matrix movies impressed me some when first saw, well, the early ones, by the time’d i’d seen the last i’d had me a little think, and arrived at the opinion they’re full of ideological bullshit.

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Date: 29/12/2015 11:38:01
From: wookiemeister
ID: 821354
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

i don’t believe it

when you look brain scans being performed you see whole swathes of the brain being involved, not some tiny part

you’d be better off with google glasses

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Date: 29/12/2015 11:40:59
From: wookiemeister
ID: 821355
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

as for improving memory you’d have more luck with some thing that improves the brain as a whole rather than a discrete part

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Date: 29/12/2015 13:33:27
From: Postpocelipse
ID: 821428
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

transition said:


Matrix movies impressed me some when first saw, well, the early ones, by the time’d i’d seen the last i’d had me a little think, and arrived at the opinion they’re full of ideological bullshit.

Ideological bullshit is just a way to tie fight scenes together……….

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Date: 29/12/2015 16:04:28
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 821508
Subject: re: Matrix-style memory prosthesis

Hmm, I’m agreeing with wookie again.

Maybe I’d better read the article.

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