Rat Brain Robots. Fusion of Animal and Machines in True Cyborg Technology.

Started by stephendare, December 23, 2008, 12:18:02 AM

stephendare

Amazing

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7559150.stm
Quote

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.

Jason

For some reason after reading that I can't help but think of Arnold ....  Oh, and the hot Kristanna Loken in T3  :)

Technology.  WOW!  The funny thing is that the the technology being used to study the brain tissue is secondary to the research.  I mean, using a sliver of rat brain isloated from the rat to control a robot via bluetooth connection.  That is insane!  Just imagine the uses for those that are paralyzed.

Bewler

That’s awesome! Hopefully advanced transhumanism will be an attainable goal within our lifetime. We may all end up living for hundreds of years. 

For those curious: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transhumanism

Conformulate. Be conformulatable! It's a perfectly cromulent deed.

Bewler

That is really amazing. It’s never occurred to me that by successfully combining a living brain with robotics that you are essentially treading new grounds as to what the brain is capable of. Like just to give a crude example, if you were able to somehow attach say a flashlight to a persons body and wire it in the same manner to their brain, they could essentially learn to switch it on and off as if they were simply lifting an arm or blinking.

So basically as long as the technology is there to properly make the connections, a brain can be taught to control functions beyond its own organic body.
Conformulate. Be conformulatable! It's a perfectly cromulent deed.