Showing posts with label Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Show all posts

11 August, 2014

Nature's Joystick: The Brain

English: This is a photo of a dummy BrainGate ...
English: This is a photo of a dummy BrainGate interface which was at the Star Wars exhibition at the Boston Science Museum in October 2005. I took it myself. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
11-August-2014
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by Nick Bilton


Engineers studying the programming code for Google Glass in April found hidden examples of ways that people might interact with the wearable computers without having to say a word. A nod could turn the glassed on or off. A single wink miht tell the glasses to take a picture.

But even these gestures might not be necessary for long. Soon, we might interact with our smartphones and computers simply by using our minds. In a couple of years, we could be turning on the lights at home just by thinking about it, or sending an e-mail from our smartphones without even pulling the device from our pocket. Further into the future, your robot assistant will appear by your side with a glass of lemonade simply because it knows you are thirsty.

Researchers in Samsung's Emerging Technology Lab are testing tablets that can be controlled by your brain, using a cap that resembles a ski hat studded with monitoring electrodes, the MIT Technology Review, the science and technology journal of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, reported in April.

The technology, often called a brain computer interface, was conceived to enable people with paralysis and other disabilities to interact with computers or control robotic arms, all by simply thinking about such actions. Before long, these technologies could well be in consumer electronics, too.

Some crude brain-reading products already exist, letting people play easy games or move a mouse around a screen.

NeuroSky, a company based in San Jose, California, recently released a Bluetooth-enabled headset that can monitor slight changes in  brain waves and allow people to play concentration-based games on computers and smartphones. These include a zombie-chasing game, archery and a game where you dodge bullets -- all these apps use your mind as a joystick.

Another company, Emotiv, sells a headset that can read brain waves associated with thoughts, feelings and expressions. The device can be used to play Tetris-like games or search through Flickr photos by thinking about an emotion the person is feeling -- like happy, or excited -- rather than searching by keywords. Muse, a lightweight, wireless headband, can engage with an app that "exercises the brain" by forcing people to concentrate on aspects of a screen, almost like taking your mind to the gym.

Car manufacturers are exploring technologies that detect when people fall asleep while driving and rattle the steering wheel to awaken them.

"The current brain technologies are like trying to listen to a conversation in a football stadium from a blimp," said John Donoghue, a neuroscientist and director of the Brown Institute for Brain Science in Providence, Rhode Island, "To really be able to understand what is going on with the brain today you need to surgically implant an array of sensors into the brain."

In other words, to gain access to the brain, for now you still need a chip in your head.

Last year, a project called BrainGate pioneered by Dr. Donoghue enabled two people with full paralysis to use a robotic arm with a computer responding to brain activity. One woman, who had not used her arms in 15 years, could serve herslef a drink by imagining the robotic arm's movements.

But that chip inside the head could soon vanish. An initiative by the Obama administration this year called the Brain Activity Map project aims to build a comprehensive map of the brain.

Miyoung Chun, a molecular biologist and vice president for science programs at the Kavli Foundation, is working on the project. Although she said it would take a decade to completely map the brain, companies would be able to build new kinds of brain computer interface products within two years.

"The Brain Activity Map will give hardware companies a lot of new tools that will change how we use smartphones and tablets," Dr. Chun said."It will revolutionize everything from robotic implants and neural prosthetics, to remove controls, which could be history in the foreseeable future when you can change your television channel by thinking about it."

There are some fears to be addressed. On the Muse website, one passage is devoted to convincing customers that the device cannot siphon thoughts from people's minds.

Dr. Donoghue said one of the current technologies used to read people's brains is called P300, in which a computer can determine which letter of the alphabet someone is thinking based on the area of the bran that is activated when she sees a screen full of letters.

But that even when advances in brain-reading technologies speed up, there will be new challenges, as scientists will have to determine if the person wants to search the Web for something in particuular, or if he is just thinking about a random topic.

He said, "Just because I'm thinking about a steak medium-rare at a restaurant doesn't mean I actually want that for dinner."


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Taken from TODAY Saturday Edition, May 4, 2013

21 July, 2014

A Plan to Start Computing's Next Era

D-Wave Orion
D-Wave Orion (Photo credit: jurvetson)
21-July-2014
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This is me, I am very curious to keep track of the developments in the computing world, and having to post this article a year after its publication would give me more insights on what happened afterwards. Did it click? Or did it bomb out? We can all know the answer, a glimpse if not the totality, from other publications. Read on...
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by Quentin Hardy


VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Our digital age is all about bits, those precise ones and zeros that are the stuff of modern computer code.

But a powerful new type of computer that is about to be commercially deployed by a major American military contractor is taking computing into the strange, subatomic realm of quantum mechanics. In that infinitesimal neighborhood, common sense logic no longer seems to apply. A one can be a one, or it can be a one and a zero and everything in between -- all at the same time.

It sounds preposterous. But academic researchers and scientists have been working to develop quantum computers.

Now, Lockheed Martin -- which bought an early version of such a computer from the Canadian company D-Wave Systems two years ago -- is confident enough in the technology to upgrade it to commercial scale, becoming the first company to use quantum computing as part of its business.

If it performs as Lockheed and D-Wave expect, the design could be used to supercharge even the most powerful systems, solving some science and business problems millions of times faster than can be done today.

Ra Johnson, Lockheed's chief technical officer, said his company would use the quantum computer to create and test complex radar, space and aircraft systems. It could be possible, for example, to tell instantly how the millions of lines of software running a network of satellites would react to a solar burst or a pulse from a nuclear explosion -- something that can now take weeks, if ever, to determine.

"This is a revolution not unlike the early days of computing," he said. "It is a transformation in the way computers are thought about."

Many others could find applications for D-Wave's computers. Cancer researchers see a potential to move rapidly through vast amounts of genetic data. The technology could also be used to determine the behavior of proteins encoded by the human genome. Researchers at Google have worked with D-Wave on using quantum computers to recognize cars and landmarks, a critical step in managing self-driving vehicles.

Quantum computing is so much faster than traditional computing because of the unusual properties of particles at the smallest level. Instead of the precision of ones and zeros that have been used to represent data since the earliest days of computers, quantum computing relies on the fact that subatomic particles inhabit a range of states. Those states can be narrowed to determine an optimal outcome among a near-infinitude of possibilities, which allows certain types of problems to be solved rapidly.

"What we're doing is a parallel development to the kind of computing we've had for the past 70 years," said Vern Brownell, chief executive of D-Wave, a 12-year-old company based in Vancouver.

D-Wave, and the broader vision of quantum-supercharged computing, are not without their critics. Much of the criticism stems from D-Wave's own claims in 2007, later withdrawn, that it would produce a commercial quantum computer within a year.

D-Wave "has said things in the past that were just ridiculous, things that give you very little confidence," said Scott Aaronson, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

But others say people working in quantum computing are generally optimistic about breakthroughs to come. Quantum researchers "are taking a step out of the theoretical domain and into the applied," said Peter Lee, the head of Microsoft's research arm. "There is a sense among top researchers that we're all in a race."


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Taken from TODAY Saturday Edition, April 06, 2013