You could potentially offer to give someone a ride and have the roof or seat of your car equipped with non-contact "brain sensors... — Outlander
The first million dollar computer that took years of research and took up the size of a room, we now wear on our wrists for little more than the cost of a large pizza. — Outlander
Unfortunately. What some people forget. Is just how the first computer was a massive, costly piece of machinery that took up the entire wall of a decent sized room. We now have them we can wear on our wrists for $50. — Outlander
Decoding worked only with cooperative participants who had participated willingly in training the decoder. If the decoder had not been trained, results were unintelligible, and if participants on whom the decoder had been trained later resisted or thought other thoughts, results were also unusable.
Also, I wonder what kind of jamming hats people could wear to thwart it? — RogueAI
Since the magnetic signals emitted by the brain are on the order of a few femtoteslas, shielding from external magnetic signals, including the Earth's magnetic field, is necessary. Appropriate magnetic shielding can be obtained by constructing rooms made of aluminium and mu-metal for reducing high-frequency and low-frequency noise, respectively.
That is, a subject thinking of something --just an image, as the apple we've seen-- and the FMRI system recognizing and naming or reproducing that image. Well, I saw nothing of the sort. — Alkis Piskas
Thoughts are not physical in nature — Alkis Piskas
Yes, I saw that. It is what AI art-generators do based on text prompts. This must be from DALL.E 3, one of the best ones. (I have not personally tried with it but I have seen samples.) And since this can be done from text, it must also be done from speech, using a speech-to-text converter. Indeed, at some point I saw a subject moving his mouth, like murmuring or something.There is a sequence about exactly that at around 12:14 with about 3-4 examples (cat, train, surfer, etc.) — Wayfarer
Well, they consist of energy and mass, but not of the kind we know in Physics. Yet, this energy and mass can be detected with special devices, e.g. polygraphs. (I have used such a device myself extensively. Not a polygraph.)I think the argument can be made that there is a physical aspect to them. What is not physical is insight, grasping the relations between ideas, and understanding meaning. — Wayfarer
Yes, I saw that. It is what AI art-generators do based on text prompts — Alkis Piskas
And since this can be done from text, it must also be done from speech, using a speech-to-text converter — Alkis Piskas
Frequency band Frequency Brain states -------------- --------- ----------------------------------------------------- Gamma (γ) >35 Hz Concentration Beta (β) 12–35 Hz Anxiety dominant, active, external attention, relaxed Alpha (α) 8–12 Hz Very relaxed, passive attention Theta (θ) 4–8 Hz Deeply relaxed, inward focused Delta (δ) 0.5–4 Hz Sleep
That's better!That’s what the youtube video is claiming. I’m not saying you have to believe it. — Wayfarer
I don't doubt. But you also have to look at what a lot of other sources have to say on the subject. (Again, 396,000,000 Google results!)Incidentally the channel, Cold Fusion TV, produces generally pretty good quality mini-documentaries on a variety of tech and business products. — Wayfarer
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) is a functional neuroimaging technique for mapping brain activity by recording magnetic fields produced by electrical currents occurring naturally in the brain, using very sensitive magnetometers. Arrays of SQUIDs (superconducting quantum interference devices) are currently the most common magnetometer, while the SERF (spin exchange relaxation-free) magnetometer is being investigated for future machines.[1][2] Applications of MEG include basic research into perceptual and cognitive brain processes, localizing regions affected by pathology before surgical removal, determining the function of various parts of the brain, and neurofeedback. This can be applied in a clinical setting to find locations of abnormalities as well as in an experimental setting to simply measure brain activity.
Nope. Brainwaves. I know, hard to believe, but there it is. — Wayfarer
Do you still believe that brain waves can be used to detect the content of thoughts, like images? — Alkis Piskas
Right.The issue isn’t whether machines can read thought via detecting brain waves, but what kind of thinking is involved. — Joshs
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