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Lazytech
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| Дата: | 11.04.21 17:24 | ||
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| Попробуйте угадать, какого рода эксперименты тогда проводились... | |
| Один из экспериментов смутно напоминает недавно представленный Маском «новаторский» эксперимент с макакой. Разве что беспроводной передачи данных не было, а количество электродов было на порядок меньше. Но, напоминаю, дело было не менее 17 лет назад. | |
The paper, written by a team led by Miguel A. L. Nicolelis, Ph.D., a celebrated specialist in brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) at Duke University, was the first to show how macaque monkeys could use their brains to make robotic arms reach and grasp.
“We’re, in the greatest sense, building on the shoulders of giants,” said Hodak, who previously did research at the Nicolelis lab at Duke.
While compelling to watch, this technology is not new. Miguel Nicolelis, a professor at Duke School of Medicine and founder of the school’s Center for Neuroengineering, conducted a similar test in 2003, though the technology then was not yet wireless. It should come as no surprise that much of Neuralink’s work is based on Nicolelis’s pioneering brain-machine research. (Max Hodak, the company’s president, worked in Nicolelis’s lab at Duke.)
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The mystique around the whole idea of direct brain control is why Neuralink’s new video has gotten so much attention. Still, Musk—whose visions often far exceed current reality—has yet to prove that Neuralink’s technology can do more than play games.