Jacking into brains and extracting video

(via), an intriguing study from an article released in Journal of Neuroscience, 1999:

Dr. Stanley is Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering in the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Harvard University. He is the ultimate voyeur. He jacks into brains and extracts video.

Using cats selected for their sharp vision, in 1999 Garret Stanley and his team recorded signals from a total of 177 cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus - a part of the brain’s thalamus [the thalamus integrates all of the brains sensory input and forms the base of the seven-layered thalamocortical loop with the six layered neocortex] - as they played 16 second digitized (64 by 64 pixels) movies of indoor and outdoor scenes. Using simple mathematical filters, the Stanley and his buddies decoded the signals to generate movies of what the cats actually saw. Though the reconstructed movies lacked color and resolution and could not be recorded in real-time [the experimenters could only record from 10 neurons at a time and thus had to make several different recording runs, showing the same video] they turned out to be amazingly faithful to the original.

The picture shows an example of a comparison between the actual and the reconstructed images:


Why do I blog this? this is definitely amazing, and very promising in terms of human-machine interactions. Besides, if you’re intro brain/mind/cognition stuff, this blog is great.
Connected pasta I already blogged about using brain-wave as game-controllers.

4 Responses to “Jacking into brains and extracting video”

  1. Chris McKinstry Says:

    Hey thanks for picking up my story and linking to my blog.

  2. :: Eliax Blog - Para Mentes Curiosas... :: Says:
    Computadora que ve lo que el cerebro ve
    Imagínate que una computadora pudiera colocar un sensor dentro de tu cerebro, y poder grabar en su memoria un video de lo que tu cerebro ve a través de tus ojos.

    Pues esto no es ciencia ficción, es trabajo de investigación del Dr. Stanley, de la Divisi

  3. Very Small Doses - J. Marcus Xavier Says:
    Scientists Capture Images from a Cat Brain
    If this story is legit, than what you’re looking at (bottom left and bottom right) are images taken directly from the brain of a cat. The top images are the originals, and the bottom images are interpolations from about 177 feline brain cells. Apparen…

  4. zach Says:

    I call shenanigans!

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