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Alpha Dude
09-26-2011, 06:47 PM
Scientists Read Minds (Sort of), Reconstruct Images From Brain Scans

Thought this was cool...




[Photo: UC Berkeley]

If you ever wanted to see what your brain sees when you’re watching Nyan Cat or a YouTube video, this is it. University of California, Berkeley researchers have recreated videos by scanning a person’s brain.

The researchers used a combination of functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) and computational models to decode and reconstruct a person’s dynamic visual experience. In the experiment, three test subjects where placed in an fMRI machine to measure the blood flow to their visual cortex as they watched videos. To monitor how the patient was being visually stimulated, the scientists divided their brain into small, three-dimensional cubes known as volumetric pixels, or "voxels."

The patient would watch one trailer while a computer program recorded their brain activity and built an algorithm by checking it against the video's visual patterns. Researchers would then show a second clip to test the computer's movie reconstruction algorithm. The end result of the research was a blurry-but-continuous 100-clip reconstruction of the original movie.

This research is a big step towards recreating moving pictures from internal imagery. One day, the technology might be used to reproduce experiences that only exist in our minds such as dreams and memories. Another use for this sort of technology could be to help those who cannot communicate verbally, such as stroke victims or coma patients.

But this sort of technology is still decades away. The computational models are still in development, and to reconstruct images, the patient needs to be placed in a MRI for hours. And as you probably noticed, some recreated images are wildly different then their original counterparts; for example, Steve Martin in a Bobby outfit is recreated as a man in a black t-shirt.



http://www.pcworld.com/article/24056...ain_scans.html
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Muezzin
09-26-2011, 06:59 PM
Whoah. Is the reconstruction built from the raw brain data, or does the system refer to a video library of sorts to recreate the memory?
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Alpha Dude
09-26-2011, 07:04 PM
It would be cool if it was from raw brain data but they do use a library of video footage. Even then it's quite an achievement.
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marwen
09-26-2011, 07:16 PM
Very interesting. Jazaka Allahu Khayran for sharing.
I wonder if it is also possible to reconstruct short or long time memory, as these experiments only showed instant brain reactions to visual stimulation.
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Abz2000
09-27-2011, 01:48 AM
This is just a clouding of the real issues,
The brain implant gives full visualisation down to near enough pixels.
They are slowly introducing it despite it being a foregone conclusion
It's been around for years:
http://www.beamsinvestigations.org.u...20Implants.htm

Without getting people too worked up, they'll talk of non invasive brain scans and the positive uses while hiding the fact that they want CCTV in everyone remaining alive after they're done.

I made a Few videos on it last year:
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Tyrion
10-09-2011, 04:01 AM
[[[[Remove please]]]]
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