¿A un paso del cybercerebro?, chip en el cerebro

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ARM anuncia que en sociedad con el CSNE (Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering) crearan en conjunto un neurochip SoC para implantarlo en el cerebro de pacientes con problemas degenerativos. Y el objetivo es obtener una interface Bidireccional [envia y recibe datos e instrucciones] Cerebro-Maquina, o pos sus siglas en ingles un BBCI (bi-directional brain-computer interfaces).

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Uno de sus beneficios seria permitir evitar la paralisis en personas que tengan dañada la espina dorsal y pierdan la comunicacion con parte de su cuerpo y por ahora usan como modelo un procesador ARM Cortex-M0 quee s el mas pequeño y eficiente a nivel rendimiento/watt.

¿Estaremos pronto de ver personas con cibercerebros y conectados a la internet, asi como en el anime clasico de Ghost in the Shell?


https://community.arm.com/iot/embedded/ ... able-chips

ARM and CSNE from the University of Washington partner to develop brain-implantable chips
by Karthik Ranjan

[..]
ARM and the Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering (CSNE) have signed an agreement whereby the CSNE will develop a unique ‘brain-implantable’ system-on-a-chip (SoC) for bi-directional brain-computer interfaces (BBCI) aimed at solving neurodegenerative disorders. Based at the University of Washington, the CSNE is a National Science Foundation engineering research center working to develop innovative ways to connect a deep computational understanding of how the brain adapts and processes information with the design of implantable devices.
The project: addressing chronic health issues through brain-computer interfaces

The research project will enable us to begin solving real world health problems with brain-implantable chips aimed at tackling a raft of debilitating neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease and even paralysis. The long-term goal is to assist people affected by neurological conditions, by engineering neurotechnology that will help the body heal, feel and move again.

The new SoC will play a vital role in decoding the complex signals formed within the brain, digitizing them so they can be processed and acted upon, with the end result of controlling the body’s muscle functions – which is the key to tackling neurodegenerative disease.

Brain-implantable chips need to be very small, highly power-efficient and capable. Our industry-proven ARM Cortex-M0 processor, the smallest ARM processor available, will contribute to this very important area of research by being an integral part of the CSNE’s brain-implantable SoC.

The project is a natural fit for ARM and our vision of improving lives around the globe by shaping a smarter, happier and healthier world with technology. Our ongoing goal of increasing the power-efficiency of ARM products aligns with CSNE’s advanced research work in developing low-power, efficient and implantable neural devices for medical applications.

Improving quality of life for those impacted by paralysis and other neurological disorders

The BBCI chip is being designed to address stroke, spinal cord injury and other neurological conditions. People who have experienced a stroke or spinal cord injury often have health issues, such as paralysis, which can impact their quality of life by preventing them from moving parts of their body, for example, a hand or an arm.

The research project will design a SoC which is able to take neural signals from the brain that represent movements the person with paralysis wants to make; before directing those signals to a stimulator implanted in the spinal cord itself. This will enable the person to make the desired movements when they want to, effectively overcoming their paralysis. In the future, the device will also be able to send information in the reverse direction, allowing the person to once again feel what their hand is touching.

Research is also demonstrating that use of such a system may eventually help to coax brain neurons to rewire in ways that help the brain recover from stroke. The result of this BBCI collaboration is development of neural devices that will benefit people by restoring sensation, limb function and augmenting the brain’s natural healing capabilities.
The brain and beyond

Dr. Scott Ransom, the CSNE’s Director of Industry Relations and Innovation, shared his thoughts about the collaboration:

“We are very excited to be collaborating with a company like ARM. ARM’s strong expertise in power-efficient microprocessors compliments the CSNE’s work in computational neuroscience and brain-computer interfacing, and we expect the partnership to lead to advances in not only medical technology but other applications as well, such as consumer electronics.”

As it matures, this technology, when combined with the human brain - one of the most critical centers of the human body - could be used to solve myriad challenges in health care and beyond.

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Creo que este tema tendría mejor cabida en Miscelánea que en Electrónica de Consumo.

Ya de paso daré mi opinión personal sobre estos dispositivos futuristas: yo temo el día en el que estas cosas sean reales. Si ya hoy por hoy somos auténticos esclavos (y en el sentido más literal de la palabra) con tantísimas tecnologías con acceso desde nuestro propio bolsillo donde vamos regalando nuestra ubicación, intereses, pensamientos, relaciones... ¿qué será de la humanidad cuando el sistema tenga acceso a nuestros propios cerebros?

Si hoy por hoy solo somos un número con el DNI me temo que en el futuro seremos una IP la que nos marque cual ganado dentro del rebaño.
Y con los que no tienen cerebro ? a esos que le hacemos? XD
WiiBoy escribió:Y con los que no tienen cerebro ? a esos que le hacemos? XD

Formateo e instalacion limpia de BrainOS [hallow]
Ya lo que nos faltaba para terminar de controlarnos totalmente.
(mensaje borrado)
Miedo me dan estas tecnologías para tenernos a todos controlados como si fuésemos ganado.
Yo aquí lo único que he visto es un tema de volver a unir cerebro con el resto del cuerpo en caso de daño nervioso. Eso es tan "cyber" como un implante coclear y no veo que nadie tome el implante coclear como algo de ciencia ficción.
Bitomo está baneado por "clon de usuario baneado"
Silent Bob escribió:Yo aquí lo único que he visto es un tema de volver a unir cerebro con el resto del cuerpo en caso de daño nervioso. Eso es tan "cyber" como un implante coclear y no veo que nadie tome el implante coclear como algo de ciencia ficción.



O usar la nanotecnología para atacar tumores cerebrales, que pese a ser benignos en un porcentaje elevado en muchos casos son inoperables por su propia situación.
EldelLeon escribió:Solo lei esto:

humo humo humo humo humo humo....

Yo tambien estoy trabajando en el proyecto de una nave espacial que llegara a jupiter en 3 minutos, esta en su fase inicial...


Esas nave la terminaran tus tataranietos, suerte con la aventura.
ojala funcione y sirva para contrarrestar los efectos del parkinson (enfermedad terrible), alzheimer, etc...
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