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  • Elon Musk, the celebrity entrepreneur behind Tesla and SpaceX, finally

  • unveiled what his company Neuralink has been up to for the past two years.

  • Neuralink is developing a brain-machine interface, or BMI, with the goal of one day helping the

  • paralyzed use robotic limbs or other devices.

  • Musk even envisions a future where able-bodied people also have BMIs that will let them communicate

  • with artificial intelligence more efficiently.

  • But BMIs have been around for over a decade, so what makes Neuralink's device newsworthy?

  • Well, aside from Elon Musk himself.

  • What can I say, everything the guy does generates publicity.

  • He has a habit of making bold predictions and goals for the future, like his claim that

  • putting a human on Mars in the next four yearssounds doable.”

  • For perspective, NASA's crewed missions to Mars won't happen until the 2030's.

  • So of course when Musk announces a company that's created thin threads to be implanted

  • in human brains, it's going to makeheadlines.

  • Anyway, hilarious puns aside, that is one of the more exciting aspects of Neuralink's coming out

  • party; the thin cellophane-like filaments containing electrodes that will be inserted

  • into the brain.

  • BMIs that have come before use an array of stiff needles with electrodes to detect neural

  • activity.

  • As you might imagine, squishing a microscopic pincushion into your brain causes some damage,

  • and the recovery process can lead to some points of contact being lost over time.

  • The brain also shifts inside the skull, and when that happens, the needles can cause further

  • damage.

  • Flexible threads of electrodes just 4 to 6 micrometers wide could be less invasive and

  • damaging.

  • Neuralink also claims they would allow for a higher volume of data, since they could

  • use over 3,000 electrodes, while some current BMIs have up to about 100.

  • But their flexibility also makes them harder to insert, like pushing on a rope.

  • To go along with their threaded electrode development, Neuralink also announced a remotely

  • operated neurosurgical robot capable of inserting 6 threads a minute.

  • Imagine a microscope and a sewing machine had a baby and you get the gist of it.But

  • Musk's company still has bigger goals in mind.

  • They're also hoping to do away with the mechanical drilling necessary to pierce the

  • skull and get to those delicious brain meats.

  • A physical drill sends vibrations through the skull, which sounds unpleasant to say

  • the least.

  • Instead, Neuralink would like to crack your bone-bucket with, what else, lasers.

  • And once their done lasering holes in your skull and using robo-sewer to run you full

  • of electrodes, they'd like to seal your skull up again completely.

  • Right now, BMIs rely on some sort of port sticking out of the skin.

  • Neuralink's prototype has a USB-C plug to connect it to hardware outside.

  • A wireless connection would probably mean less data could be sent back and forth, but

  • it would eliminate the open hole in the skull, a prime site for dangerous infections.

  • Neuralink envisions a sleek, battery-powered computer sitting behind the ear that will

  • communicate with implanted chips connected to four different areas of the brain.

  • It might even be controlled by an app.

  • Some of the uses of BMIs are obvious.

  • People in wheelchairs could control it with their minds instead of a joystick.

  • Those who have lost limbs could have a connection to a robotic arm they can manipulate.

  • And Musk envisions his threads of electrodes not only being used to detect brain signals,

  • but giving feedback as well.

  • Controlling an arm that doesn't tell you where it is is like moving a limb that's

  • fallen asleep.

  • Some sort of sensory feedback would go a long way to making the technology more practical.

  • But Musk also sees uses for his technology that are not as readily apparent.

  • Right now the way your brain communicates with the outside world is pretty limited.

  • If you want to talk to a computer, you've got your mouth for speaking and your fingers

  • for typing and that's about it.

  • Musk envisions high-bandwidth communication directly from your brain to machines and vice-versa.

  • He hopes to make the human relationship with AI a symbiotic one, instead of his famously

  • pessimistic outlook on the future of artificial intelligence.

  • But again, this may be Musk looking at such a big picture he's painting off-canvas.

  • Before any of this can happen Neuralink needs to get approval from the FDA to begin testing

  • their technology in humans.

  • The threads need to be proven to survive the highly corrosive salty solution inside the bra

  • And there's a host of ethical, security, and privacy issues that need to be worked

  • out as well.

  • Right now Neuralink technology has only been tested in rats, and the grander ideas they've

  • proposed were in a white paper that has yet to be peer reviewed by other academics.

  • Musk hopes to have human trials beginning by the end of next year, but like his ambitious

  • four-years-to-Mars prediction, he might be ahead of his time.

  • Would you use this technology to mind-meld with computers or are you worried about the

  • ethics and security?

  • Let us know in the comments, and while you're at it

  • check out this episode on How Close Are We to Controlling Machines With Our Minds.

  • Make sure to subscribe and

  • I'll see you next time on Seeker.

Elon Musk, the celebrity entrepreneur behind Tesla and SpaceX, finally

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