University of Reading creates "Rat-Cyborg"

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This is just awesome.


Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7559150.stm


Rat-brain robot aids memory study
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Dr Ben Whalley, from the University of Reading has carried out tests on the 'rat- brain-controlled' robot.

A robot controlled by a blob of rat brain cells could provide insights into diseases such as Alzheimer's, University of Reading scientists say.

The project marries 300,000 rat neurons to a robot that navigates via sonar.

The neurons are now being taught to steer the robot around obstacles and avoid the walls of the small pen in which it is kept.

By studying what happens to the neurons as they learn, its creators hope to reveal how memories are laid down.

Hybrid machines

The blob of nerves forming the brain of the robot was taken from the neural cortex in a rat foetus and then treated to dissolve the connections between individual neurons.

Sensory input from the sonar on the robot is piped to the blob of cells to help them form new connections that will aid the machine as it navigates around its pen.

As the cells are living tissue, they are kept separate from the robot in a temperature-controlled cabinet in a container pitted with electrodes. Signals are passed to and from the robot via Bluetooth short-range radio.
Reading robot, University of Reading/PA
The robot and rat brain cells work together

The brain cells have been taught how to control the robot's movements so it can steer round obstacles and the next step, say its creators, is to get it to recognise its surroundings.

Once the robot can do this the researchers plan to disrupt the memories in a bid to recreate the gradual loss of mental faculties seen in diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

Studies of how neural tissue is degraded or copes with the disruption could give insights into these conditions.

"One of the fundamental questions that neuroscientists are facing today is how we link the activity of individual neurons to the complex behaviours that we see in whole organisms and whole animals," said Dr Ben Whalley, a neuroscientist at Reading.

"This project gives us a really useful and unique opportunity to look at something that may exhibit whole behaviours but still remains closely tied to the activity of individual neurons," he said.

The Reading team is not the first to harness living tissue to control robots.

In 2003, Dr Steve Potter at the Georgia Institute of Technology pioneered work on what he dubbed "hybrots" that marry neural tissue and robots.

In earlier work, scientists at Northwestern University Medical Center in the US wired a wheeled robot up to a lamprey in a bid to explore novel ways of controlling prosthetics.


It seems that cybernetics are almost here. We are now entering the new age that we only dreamed of in sci-fi novels.

Now I'm waiting for the rats to bluetooth access supercomputers and take over the world.
 
Although I don't approve of lab experiments on animals, I still think it's completely mind-blowing that we are able to do stuff like that.

I still get a "WTF?!" feeling when I look at this, for instance:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-cpcoIJbOU[/youtube]

It becomes really weird at around 4:00.

The brain sho is a wonderful thing.
 
alec said:
It becomes really weird at around 4:00.

The brain sho is a wonderful thing.

That is awesome. I have been wanting to study exactly that for years. Sadly I chose a different path earlier in life and I just can't make myself go back to university again. Incorporate that technology in music and voila. That would be awesome.
 
We're getting closer and closer to my ultimate goal of being able to hook my brain up to a robot, and becoming immortal :crazy:.
 
2020 is coming

All hail the cybermonkey!

In all honesty however, as long as the monkey is not suffering I have to say that the monkey, Aurora as it has been named, deserves one hell of a round of applause, as for the rat-bot, it kinda falls into the category of abortion (being a fetal transplant) it's easy to look down on those creatures, but if you ask me, those monkeys, dogs, cats, and the myriad of other critters used in various scientific experiments for the betterment of mankind deserve a statue each, not the scientist.

Sure the scientist was the brains of the operation, but the critter was completely removed from it's habitat, in most cases killed for the sake of the science, in that regard I applaud them.

Now will human inhibition stop the next step before 2013...
 
generalissimofurioso said:
These rat-bots will decimate our cheese supplies!

We must build cat-bots to repel them!

Funny Colbert said something similar.I love that guy.
 
Heres a more disturbing way of it working in the "Other Direction"




I SMELL POLITICAL CONSPIRACY! MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE!


[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PpfjmzZ4NTw&feature=related[/youtube]

















And here are rats flying planes!



[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jeV77dSyMI&feature=related[/youtube]



They have taken control of our military and our government!
 
ghost-in-the-shell-movie.jpg


in real life, soon.... :shock:
 
Skynet, your sig, it's all about immersion these days dude.

(mind controlled post)
 
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