Monday, July 16, 2012
DARPA is developing brain-control capability (6)
http://www.smartplanet.com/blog/smart-takes/darpa-aims-to-control-prosthetic-limbs-with-brain-implants/4890
DARPA aims to control prosthetic limbs with brain implants
By Andrew Nusca | March 10, 2010, 6:28 AM PST
As the use of prosthetic limbs increases in military veterans,
the Pentagon is investigating prostheses that are more durable, reliable and
directly controlled using brain implants.
DARPA, the military’s research arm, said it will launch the
next phase of its decade-old Revolutionizing Prosthetics program, which
had an original goal to create a fully-functioning, neurally-controlled human
limb within five years.
Though the agency has made considerable progress —human
trials of the DEKA Arm are underway, and a neurally-controlled arm is
under development at Johns Hopkins University — it hasn’t yet
achieved its goal.
The hurdles:
It has proved difficult to fully integrate human neural
pathways with artificial platforms.
Neural-recording interfaces have short life spans of just
two years.
Neural-recording interfaces don’t extract adequate
information to yield seamless movement from brain to neurons to limbs.
Current prototypes can’t move fast enough: even at 500
events per second, it’s not enough for fluid motion.
To face the challenge, DARPA is launching its Histology
for Interface Stability Over Time program.
The goal: create a neurally-controlled limb that lasts for
70 years and has complete integration with the human body.
Here’s what the agency says (.pdf):
DARPA is soliciting innovative research proposals in the
area of neural-recording interface failure analysis. The HIST program seeks to
develop the technology needed to reliably extract information from the nervous
system, and to do so at a scale and rate necessary to control many
degree-of-freedom (DOF) machines, such as high-performance prosthetic limbs.
Technologies and techniques emerging from this program will enable the construction
of reliable neural-recording interfaces, which will be suitable for clinical
use over the lifetime of an injured soldier (~70 years). Additionally, an
objective understanding of the failure mechanisms will lead to high-throughput
biological testing, due to the discovery of predictive markers linked to a high
probability of failure and other accelerated-testing techniques. Proposed
research should investigate innovative approaches that enable revolutionary
advances in science, devices, or systems. Specifically excluded is research
that primarily results in evolutionary improvements to the existing state of
practice.
In other words: DARPA wants to understand why
neural-recording interfaces are so unreliable, and how failure can be predicted
before an amputee is left without the use of an artificial limb.
The program is structures in three phases over three years.
It’s basically like a hacker contest for prosthetic limbs — DARPA wants
researchers to overload neural systems to find vulnerabilities.
Of particular concern are “implanted cortical microelectrodes,”
or brain implants, which DARPA believes may be the best system for the job.
DARPA is developing brain-control capability (5)
http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2010-09/darpa-wants-mind-control-keep-soldiers-sharp-smart-and-safe
DARPA has been trying to crawl inside the minds of soldiers
for a while now, but a new ultrasound technology could let them get deeper
inside than ever. Working under a DARPA grant, a researcher at Arizona State is
developing transcranial pulsed ultrasound technology that could be
implanted in troops’ battle helmets, allowing soldiers to manipulate brain
functions to boost alertness, relieve stress, or even reduce the effects of
traumatic brain injury.
Manipulating the brain to enhance warfighting capabilities
and maintain mental acuity on the battlefield has long been a topic of interest
for DARPA and various military research labs, but the technology to do so
remains limited. Deep brain stimulation (DBS), for instance, requires
surgically implanted electrodes to stimulate neural tissues, while
less-invasive methods like transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) possess
limited reach and low spatial resolution.
But Dr. William J. Tyler, an assistant professor of life
sciences at ASU, writes on the DoD’s “Armed With Science” blog: “To overcome
the above limitations, my laboratory has engineered a novel technology which
implements transcranial pulsed ultrasound to remotely and directly stimulate
brain circuits without requiring surgery. Further, we have shown this
ultrasonic neuromodulation approach confers a spatial resolution approximately
five times greater than TMS and can exert its effects upon subcortical brain circuits
deep within the brain.”
Tyler’s technology, packaged in a warfighter’s helmet, would
allow soldiers to flip a switch to stimulate different regions of their brains,
helping them relieve battle stress when it’s time to get some rest, or to boost
alertness during long periods without sleep. Grunts could even relieve pain
from injuries or wounds without resorting to pharmaceutical drugs. More
importantly, in the periods after brain trauma ultrasound technology could
reduce swelling and metabolic damage that is often the root cause of lasting
brain damage.
DARPA is developing brain-control capability (4)
IBM produces first 'brain chips'
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-14574747
IBM has developed a microprocessor which it claims comes
closer than ever to replicating the human brain.
The system is capable of "rewiring" its
connections as it encounters new information, similar to the way biological
synapses work.
Researchers believe that by replicating that feature, the
technology could start to learn.
Cognitive computers may eventually be used for understanding
human behaviour as well as environmental monitoring.
Dharmendra Modha, IBM's project leader, explained that they
were trying to recreate aspects of the mind such as emotion, perception,
sensation and cognition by "reverse engineering the brain."
The SyNAPSE system uses two prototype "neurosynaptic
computing chips". Both have 256 computational cores, which the scientists
described as the electronic equivalent of neurons.
One chip has 262,144 programmable synapses, while the other
contains 65,536 learning synapses.
Man machine
In humans and animals, synaptic connections between brain
cells physically connect themselves depending on our experience of the world.
The process of learning is essentially the forming and strengthening of
connections.
A machine cannot solder and de-solder its electrical tracks.
However, it can simulate such a system by "turning up the volume" on
important input signals, and paying less attention to others.
IBM has not released exact details of how its SyNAPSE
processor works, but Dr Richard Cooper, a reader in cognitive science at
Birkbeck, University of London said that it likely replicated physical
connections using a "virtual machine".
Instead of stronger and weaker links, such a system would
simply remember how much "attention" to pay to each signal and alter
that depending on new experiences.
"Part of the trick is the learning algorithm - how
should you turn those volumes up and down," said Dr Cooper.
"There's a a whole bunch of tasks that can be done just
with a relatively simple system like that such as associative memory. When we
see a cat we might think of a mouse."
Some future-gazers in the cognitive computing world have
speculated that the technology will reach a tipping point where machine
consciousness is possible.
However, Dr Mark Bishop, professor of cognitive computing at
Goldsmiths, was more cautious.
"[I] understand cognition to be something over and
above a process simulated by the execution of mere computations, [and] see such
claims as verging on the magical," he said.
IBM's work on the SyNAPSE project continues and the company,
along with its academic partners, has just been awarded $21m (£12.7m) by the US
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
DARPA is developing brain-control capability (3)
DARPA takes new look at electrical brain stimulation to aid
in learning April 21, 2011
by Bob Yirka in Neuroscience
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-04-darpa-electrical-brain-aid.html
New research going on in Albequerque, NM by a team of
neuroscientists working for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) indicates that mild brain stimulation with electrical shocks, might in
fact cause people to learn more easily.
The team, led by Vincent Clark, of the University of New
Mexico, has been applying electrodes to the scalps of volunteers, and then
giving them very mild electrical shocks while they play a battle simulation
video game designed to teach soldiers to react properly in stressful
conditions. Called transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS), the
procedure employs a nine volt battery and electrodes connected to wet sponges
affixed to the temples of game players to send just a few milliamps of current
through the skull and into the brain as they attempt to differentiate between
friend and foe in dilapidated, potentially dangerous environmental conditions.
Two groups were tested, one received 2 milliamps while they
played, the other just 0.1. The volunteers receiving the larger amount showed
twice as much improvement as those that did not, which Clark says shows quite
clearly how effective tDCS can be. Pilot video for tDCS informed consent.
Applying electricity to the brain has a long and at times dark history.
Doctors, psychiatrists and other researchers have known for
hundreds of years that applying electrical current to the brain can cause
changes; some good, some not so much. Electrical stimulation has been used to
keep executed prisoners from twitching after death, to “help” patients overcome
depression and more recently to help people with injuries or brain impairments to
regain functionality. This history now colors any new research as fear and
skepticism tend to get in the way of serious work.
This is likely the
reason that this new research is being done by DARPA, rather than an
independent organization; it doesn’t have to answer to anyone except the DoD.
Because the amount of current is so small, volunteers report no pain, just a
slight tingling sensation during the procedure, and afterwards can offer no
real explanations as to why they performed better than they might have
otherwise.
This research, and other studies like it, have set off both
alarms and intrigue in certain quarters. Some worry people, such as college
students will jump on the procedure as a means to help cram for exams, others
wonder if electronic devices such as blue-tooth phones are emitting electricity
that might help them learn; while others yet point out, very soberly, that no
one really knows just yet what long-term effects people might have from
exposure to something as simple as tCDS.
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-04-darpa-electrical-brain-aid.html#jCp
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-04-darpa-electrical-brain-aid.html#jCp
DARPA is developing brain-control capability (2)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/08/18/ibm_darpa_synapse_project/
DARPA shells out $21m for IBM cat brain chip
By Timothy Prickett Morgan
Posted in Rise of the Machines, 18th August 2011
16:27 GMT
The US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is moving
ahead with IBM in the third leg of its Synapse cat brain chip. That leaves one
more leg, a tail, and nine lives to go.
Because this is the military, the third leg of the Systems
of Neuromorphic Adaptive Plastic Scalable Electronics (Synapse) project at
DARPA is called phase 2, and IBM's techies have already completed phases 0 and
1. The initial phase of the project simulated the cortex of a cat brain on
an IBM BlueGene massively parallel supercomputer with 147,456 cores and 144TB
of memory and developing the basic synaptic circuits for the brain chip.
[…]
Phase one, which brought in $16.1m in funding spread across
IBM and researchers at Stanford University, the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Cornell University, Columbia University Medical Center, and
the University of California-Merced, focused on simulating and building
prototype brain chips that have electronic synapses and memory circuits instead
of simulating them using sequentially processing von Neumann-style processors
like the ones on our desktops and in the data centers of the world.
IBM is unveiling the fruits of the phase 1 work today and
the fact that its cognitive computer dream team, headed up by Dharmendra Modha,
the Synapse project leader at IBM Research, as well as announcing that DARPA
has allocated another $21m in funding to begin the phase 2 work.
Like most DARPA projects, Synapse has some impressive goals
and ones that may not pan out. There is a lot of talk about "dawn of a new
paradigm" and "dawn of a new age" as researchers try to create
brain-like systems. The problem, according to DARPA, is that von Neumann
machines, while great for playing Angry Birds and wasting time at work, are
less efficient than biological computers – the ripply, fat-encrusted gray stuff
between your ears – by between a factor of 1 million to 1 billion. It takes an
increasingly complex von Neumann machine to handle increasingly complex data
streaming in from the environment:
[…]
The IBM team is working for DARPA to create a chip that is
designed to chew on streams telemetry and rewire itself, much as your brain
does as it learns, as it learns about the world from that telemetry.
"This is a major initiative to move beyond the von
Neumann paradigm that has been ruling computer architecture for more than half
a century," said Modha in a statement. "Future applications of
computing will increasingly demand functionality that is not efficiently delivered
by the traditional architecture. These chips are another significant step in
the evolution of computers from calculators to learning systems, signaling the
beginning of a new generation of computers and their applications in business,
science and government."
[…]
IBM is not using wetware biological components to make its
neurosynaptic chips, but rather plain old 45 nanometer CMOS with
silicon-on-oxide doping, exactly the same process that IBM is using to etch its
Power7 processors. The neurosynaptic cores replicating the function of
synapses, neurons, and axons in the brain to provide memory, computation, and
communication. IBM has created two prototype neurosynaptic chips thus far,
which have 256 simulated neurons. One design has 262,144 programmable synapses
and the other has 65,536 learning synapses.
IBM has already put these relatively small-brained chips
through the paces performing navigation, machine vision, pattern recognition,
associative memory, and other tasks. The long-term goal of the Synapse project
is to create a system based on the neurosynaptic chips that has 10 billion
electronic neurons and 100 trillion synapses, all packed up in a two-liter
volume and burning only one kilowatt.
[…]
At this point, we humans can tell the Internet to go read
and write itself and get back to goofing off. Or, we'll be working the gas
chambers for Skynet.
In phase 3 of the Synapse project, IBM plans to cook up a
chip with 10 million neurons and work on simulation and design of a fake brain
with 100 million neurons using a multi-chip. In phase 4 of the project, IBM
Research's team hopes to build a robot using this multi-chip fake brain and do
the emulation and simulation of a fake brain with around 10 billion neurons,
what IBM and DARPA call a "human level design". ®
DARPA is developing brain-control capability (1)
The Pentagon wants to understand the science behind what
makes people violent. The question is what do they plan to do with it?
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120501-building-the-like-me-weapon/1
In February this year, the US government was forced into
full damage limitation mode. News that US troops in Afghanistan had sent copies
of the Koran to be incinerated, sparked a wave of deadly protests that left 36
people dead and more than 200 injured. Despite an apology from President
Barack Obama and assurances that the burning was accidental, the public
relations offensive launched to counter the damage done to the military’s
reputation and stem the violence showed little sign of success.
Now imagine that instead of employing public relations
experts to advise on the best strategy, US officials had a device that could
advise them what to say, generating a story based on a scientific understanding
of the brain’s inner workings to soothe tempers and calm the mood of the
population. It sounds like something from a science fiction blockbuster, but is
in fact the premise behind the Pentagon’s growing interest in the neurobiology
of political violence, a relatively new field that combines neuroscience with
more traditional social science-based approaches to understanding human
behaviour.
One programme, started last year by the Pentagon’s Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (Darpa), even looks at finding ways to
generate versions of events that could be used in attempts to persuade people
not to support the enemy. Known as Narrative Networks, it seeks to
"understand how narratives influence human thoughts and behaviour, then
apply those findings to a security context in order to address security challenges
such as radicalization, violent social mobilization, insurgency and terrorism,
and conflict prevention and resolution,” says William Casebeer, the Darpa
official leading the work.
The idea is straightforward: scientists have long known that
narratives exert a powerful force on the human mind, helping to shape people’s
concept of individual and group identities, even motivating them to conduct
violent acts. Some bloggers and people posting on Twitter have suggested the
Pentagon is seeking to elevate brainwashing to a science. "Darpa looking
to master propaganda via Narrative Networks,'" read the headline of a
report on the science news website Phys.org, for example, alongside
countless similar blog posts and tweets.
Those involved in the research disagree. “None of the work
we are doing, nor anyone else I know in the Narrative Networks group, is about
increasing the ability of soldiers or sailors to kill people or to brainwash
people,” says Paul Zak, a professor at Claremont Graduate University in
Claremont, California, who specializes in neuroeconomics, and whose work has
been funded by the Darpa program.
Zak and others see this type of research being used in the
shaping of messages that shows the US military in the best possible light, such
as by highlighting its humanitarian work abroad. “Is there a way to hold events
that might publicise things like healthcare, public health factors, [or] tooth
brushing for children and you could give away half a million toothbrushes,” he
says. “There could be things that help countries understand that most of the
time what we want to do is get along with everybody.”
Zak’s work involves trying to understand how listening to
stories affects the brain’s natural release of oxytocin, sometimes called the
trust hormone. “Why are we grabbed by some stories and not others?’ he says.
“It just seems like a great question to ask.”
To test his theories, Zak uses an experiment that involves
involves university students watching a short video featuring a father
describing his son’s battle with brain cancer. After watching the video, Zak
measures oxytocin levels in the blood of the participants, as well as their
willingness to give the money they’ve earned from participating in the
experiment to charity. “Our hypothesis is that this connection system that
human beings have, which utilizes oxytocin, is activated by these same kinds of
narratives, these same kinds of stories,” he says.
But stories aren’t the only way to increase trust. Zak has
also experimented with having subjects spray oxytocin into their nose, but it's
not an approach that would have practical applications for the military, he
cautions. The government is not looking to “just spray oxytocin into the
crowds,” he says. “That, first of all, would be highly unethical and
illegal, and it wouldn’t work anyway. You have to get a lot into the brain.“
War stories
While Zak is focusing on oxytocin, other researchers working
with Darpa’s support are trying to understand the parts of the brain
responsible for values and ideals. Emory University professor Greg Berns, a
neuroeconomist, recently conducted an experiment that involved paying people to
give up their fundamental ideals and beliefs. Participants were placed in a
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanner while statements based on
answers they had previously given on a questionnaire were presented on a
screen. Topics related to either core beliefs such as views on gay marriage,
sex with children and the sterilization of people with genetic conditions, or
less fundamental matters such as preference for PCs or Macs.
The volunteers were then offered up to $100 to sign
statements disavowing their previous views. Perhaps unsurprisingly, more were
willing to take money to change position on things like whether they were a cat
person rather than a dog person than were willing to do so to shift their
stances on whether they would accept money for sex, for example. More
interestingly, Berns found that fundamental values, such as those concerning
sex and belief in God, triggered activity in a part of the brain called the
left temporoparietal junction, while more every-day belief statements stimulated
activity in the entirely separate left and right inferior parietal lobes.
These findings, suggests Berns, means there is a biological
basis for ethnic conflict. “Many of the conflicts that we currently face
internationally are ultimately about control of biology,” says Berns. People
may say they are fighting for ideas, but what they are really fighting for,
according to Berns, is for values connected to survival, such as reproductive
rights. “Things like religion are placeholders for that; what we’re seeing is a
very Darwinian struggle for limited resources,” he says.
Berns, like the other researchers involved, says the Darpa
program is about finding ways to stop people from fighting, not controlling
them. “It’s not about brainwashing people," he says. "We’re not in
the business of reading people’s minds, or implanting thoughts. By
understanding the biology of what causes people go to war, we might begin to
understand how to mitigate it.”
Whether creating better narratives can help reduce conflict
is still an open question, however. Neuroscientists at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT), in Cambridge, Massachusetts, have been studying
the role of stories and dialogue on those involved the Arab-Israeli conflict,
and in particular, how stories affect sympathy for others.
“I think there’s a perception out there that if someone
commits these horrible atrocities to another group that they must be
sociopaths, they must be psychopaths that lack empathy for other people,” says
Emile Bruneau, a post-doctoral fellow at the Saxe Lab at MIT, which is not
funded by the Darpa programme. “But, I think it might be very different, that
they might actually be highly empathic people, but their empathy is highly
regulated so that it’s applied strongly to in-group members but not at all to
out-group members.”
In a study published last year, Bruneau and his colleagues
looked at what happens in the brain when Jewish Israelis and Arabs read stories
intended to evoke sympathy about members of each other's group. Participants
read about children suffering physical or emotional pain such as by cutting
themselves with a knife or losing a parent, for example. Brain scans carried
out with fMRI machines showed these stories elicited similar patterns of
activation in the medial prefrontal cortex, the brain region associated with
sympathy, whether subjects read about members of their own group or about
"the enemy". Interestingly, reading the same stories about the suffering
of South Americans triggered a noticeably different response in this brain
region and others involved in thinking about others' emotions. “The most poetic
interpretation of that is these are the brain regions where the opposite of
love is not hate, but indifference,” says Bruneau.
In a separate study, Bruneau and colleagues asked Israelis
and Palestinians to write about the difficulties they faced because of the
ongoing conflict. The accounts were then read by members of the opposing group,
and feelings such as empathy, trust and warmth were measured using a survey.
The researchers found the attitudes of the Palestinians towards the Israelis
improved more when they were allowed to tell their stories, rather than
listening, whereas Israelis' attitudes about Palestinians improved more after
they listened to Palestinians describing their experiences.
The MIT research could hold some lessons for the US
government, which spends over a billion dollars a year on trying to convince
foreign audiences of its point of view, whether via radio broadcasting, or
through the Pentagon’s foreign language news sites. “It’s interesting that we
spend a lot of money as a country on the Voice of America [radio station],”
Bruneau says, “when this research is starting to show that what might be most
effective would be the ear of America.”
Line of defence
Beyond the question of better storytelling is a fundamental
question about whether such research will actually help the Pentagon convince
people that the US military is really there to help them. Tom Pyszczynski, a
social psychologist at the University of Colorado who studies terrorism, says
it’s not clear that understanding the neuroscience of violence, while an
interesting scientific endeavor, will lead on its own to solutions to
terrorism.
“We need to understand those things, no doubt about it, but,
in terms of promoting peace I’m not sure that knowing where in the brain the
anger that leads to violence is happening is going to help us discourage war,”
says Pyszczynski, who has been studying the effects of the recent Arab Spring
uprisings on attitudes towards the West. “We’re not going to be able to go in
and zap people’s amygdalae or anesthetize them or do whatever,” he says. “We’re
going to need to change the way they interpret things that happen and we’re
going to need to stop doing things that people interpret as insulting or
challenging to their way of life.”
For Pyszczynski, the potential for such work also raises an
interesting ethical question reminiscent of the issues addressed A
Clockwork Orange, both the 1971 film and the book on which it was based. “If
you could somehow reliably change peoples’ minds so that they didn’t want to
kill anymore, should that be done?” he asks. “Well, you’re impinging on their
freedom in a way, but on the other hand you’re saving a lot of lives.
But shaping public relations campaigns – and people’s minds
- isn’t necessarily the only military application for such research. David
Matsumoto, a professor of psychology and director of the Culture and Emotion
Research Laboratory at San Francisco State University, is being funded by
another Pentagon initiative, called Minerva, to conduct scientific research on
the role of emotions in inciting political violence. Matsumoto and his
colleagues are studying language and facial expressions used by political
leaders to see if those can be used to predict future violence.
“I think that one of the most logical direct applications of
this kind of finding and this line of research [is] to develop sensors that can
watch, either monitor the words that are being spoken and/or the non-verbal
behaviors that are expressive of those emotions,” he says of the Pentagon’s
interest in his work. “I think the development of sensors like that ... would
be sort of an early warning signal or system [to detect violence].”
Of course, some might question whether the vision of a
machine that spits out story lines at the flip of a switch, or provides an
early warning “emotion” sensor for war, is blue sky dreaming. But Read
Montague, a neuroscientist at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute in
Roanoke, Virginia, sees the possibility of technology that could come into play
in cases like the Koran-burning protests in Afghanistan.
“I see a device coming that’s going to make suggestions to
you, like, a, this situation is getting tense, and, b, here are things you need
to do now, I’ll help you as you start talking,” says Montague, who is part of
the Darpa Narrative Networks project. “That could be really useful.”
Montague points out that people also once doubted that a computer could beat a chess master, but as technology advanced, computers eventually became good enough that they could out manoeuvre even the best chess players. Of course, the idea of Big Blue-style computer that taps the mind’s biology to generate stories sounds less like a feel-good storytelling machine than a military weapon designed to manipulate people’s mental state.
“It’s a weapon,” says Montague, “but it’s a defensive weapon.”
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