Hohoe, Nov 28, - A team of researchers at Wits University in
Johannesburg, South Africa have made a major breakthrough in the field of
biomedical engineering.
They have linked a brain directly
to the internet and this project could help fuel the next steps in machine
learning and brain-computer interfaces.
According to a release available
to the Ghana News Agency, published on Medical Express, for the first time
ever, researchers have devised a way of connecting the human brain to the
internet in real time. It’s been dubbed the “Brainternet” project, and it
essentially turns the brain “…into an Internet of Things (IoT) node on the
World Wide Web."
The project works by taking
brainwave EEG signals gathered by an Emotiv EEG device connected to the user’s
head. The signals are then transmitted to a low cost Raspberry Pi computer,
which live streams the data to an application programming interface and displays
the data on an open website where anyone can view the activity.
Adam Pantanowitz, a lecturer in
the Wits School of Electrical and Information Engineering and the project’s
supervisor, said: "Brainternet is a new frontier in brain-computer
interface systems. There is a lack of easily understood data about how a human
brain works and process information.
"Brainternet seeks to
simplify a person’s understanding of their own brain and the brains of others.
It does this through continuous monitoring of brain activity as well as
enabling some interactivity."
Pantanowitz said this is just the
beginning of the possibilities of the project.
He added that the team was now
aiming to allow for a more interactive experience between the user and their
brain. Some of this functionality has already been built into the site, but it
is very narrow — limited to stimulus such as arm movement.
“Brainternet can be further
improved to classify recordings through a smart phone app that will provide
data for a machine-learning algorithm. In future, there could be information
transferred in both directions – inputs and outputs to the brain,” Pantanowitz
said.
Future applications for this
project could lead to some very exciting breakthroughs in machine learning and
brain-computer interfaces like Elon Musk’s Neural Lace and Bryan Johnson’s
Kernel.
Data collected from this project
could lead to a better understanding of how our minds work and how we can take
advantage of that knowledge to augment our brain power.
GNA

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