Report about scientific research into brain waves.
Recorded for June 22, 2015, but can run a few days later.
Vice reports that scientists in Albany, New York just turned a person s thoughts into a legible phrase using what they re calling a brain-to-text interface. Researchers at the National Center for Adaptive Neurotechnologies and the State University of New York at Albany worked on the brain wave study, but it wasn t quite the kind of mind reading you may have seen in the movies. Instead, surgeons opened up skulls and electrode sheets were attached directly to brains in the study. Clearly the research into brain wave communication is in the early stages. Peter Brunner at the University of Albany said the research is primitive at this point. I liken it to having a helicopter over a crowd of cheering people. If you re near them, you can hear them cheering, but you can t hear individual people. If you put a microphone on one or two people, you re able to hear them, but you can t hear the overall picture. But if you put electrodes all over the surface of the brain "giving microphones to groups of people cheering "you can figure out what those groups are cheering for. Three years ago, Gerwin Schalk, Ph.D., associate professor of neurology at the Albany Medical College and a research scientist at the Wadsworth Center of the state Department of Health told the Troy Record about similar research, My colleagues at the Wadsworth Center are already using this technology for patients with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Lou Gehrig s Disease) to do simple communication.
Research about brain waves for June 22, 2015
Radio news about radio waves.
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June 22, 2015
Produced at Wave Farm/WGXC in the Hudson Valley, New York.