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Out of Pod Experience

 
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RL Implants coming soon

First post
Author
Doreen Kaundur
#1 - 2014-05-09 13:11:11 UTC
Quote:
10 Amazing Superpowers Humans Will Be Able To Get From Brain Implants

A tiny computer chip surgically embedded in your brain could give you superpowers. It sounds crazy, but scientists already use these devices to restore sight for some blind people and hearing for the deaf.

In the future these implants, also known as neuroprosthetics, will be able to do much more — sometimes with the help of super-sensitive eye or ear implants. By using electronic signals to stimulate parts of the brain, these chips can now deliver visual and auditory signals and restore connections that have been severed by trauma. Once our understanding of the brain has improved, researchers think it'll be possible to deliver more data to the mind.

It's currently risky to drill into the skull and put a small electronic device in there, but the technology is rapidly advancing. Soon, things we consider superpowers will be readily available to anyone who wants them — and can afford it.

Here are some of the things that brain implants will make possible.

1. Hear a conversation from across a room, or in a crowded club.

Already, cochlear implants can restore hearing for some people, and even allow them to hear for the first time. With the help of specialized hardware, they could tune out what you don't want to hear, or use sensitive equipment to pick up far-off soundwaves.

2. Give you the ability to see in the dark.

FDA-approved retinal implants can restore the ability to see motion and shapes for people blinded by a certain genetic condition already. As understanding of the ocular nerve improves, better versions of these implants could give you the night vision of a cat.

3. Give you sight that can zoom in on things that are far away.

Researchers have already developed contacts that can zoom. But a retinal prosthetic that could do the same thing should make it possible to do this all the time.

4. Make you better at math and navigation.

Directly stimulating areas of the brain can already boost people's mathematical and navigational abilities in a lab setting. With a brain implant that did this all the time, it'd be a lot harder to pull the "I'm just not a math person" excuse anymore.

5. Allow you to download skills like in "The Matrix."

Researchers claim that once we understand how practicing a skill transforms the brain over time, we might be able to use implants to cause those same transformations to occur, providing the motor memory for kung-fu skills, or whatever else you want to learn.

6. Restore damaged memories.

The military's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is already experimenting with brain implants that will help soldiers suffering from traumatic brain injuries by using electrodes to stimulate damaged tissue. In the future, this could be a valuable medical technology.

7. Cure depression and control mood.

DARPA is also working on neuroprosthetics that could cure depression and PTSD. This is similar to recent research showing how Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation might be an extremely effective antidepressant. Future implants could regulate the brain and make sure it keeps working the way it should, providing stimulation when necessary.

8. Enhance focus and energy, like stimulants without the drugs.

Drugs like Adderall and Ritalin are well known for their alertness-boosting abilities, but also for their serious side effects. Brain stimulation could both enhance focus and mental clarity, but without the jittery, speedy, up-all-night feelings — and the post-amphetamine crash.

9. Control machines with your mind.

It sounds crazy, but researchers have already used a neuroprosthetic sensor to control a robotic arm. As this technology is refined, that control will only become more accurate, allowing for remote control of robots, computers, and more.

10. Search the web and translate languages.

Once these implants can transmit and receive information, it should be possible to think of a topic — or look at a tree or painting — and send that information to the web, and have relevant results fed back into your brain. This technology is still far away, and will depend on smaller and biologically safer computer chips, as well as better brain maps.

Once that's possible, it'll have even greater implications. Imagine being able to travel anywhere in the world and being able to understand what's being said. The same technology that transmits auditory information could potentially feed that data through a translating service and interpret it for you in real time, like your very own Babel fish.

[center]1. Minor navigation color change. 2. Show bookmarks in the overview.[/center]

Dave Stark
#2 - 2014-05-09 13:12:12 UTC
that's both awesome, and worrying.
Jenn aSide
Worthless Carebears
The Initiative.
#3 - 2014-05-09 13:14:29 UTC
That's cool, but will the be available from the Wal-Mart LP store?
Nakami Saans
Conclave of Independent Pilots
#4 - 2014-05-09 13:17:04 UTC  |  Edited by: Nakami Saans
Transhumanism. I've written several research papers for school on the subject. It's both wondrous and terrifying but I'm ready for it.

Edit: This technology will give us the ability to play from our pod Big smile

People: "You shouldn't burn bridges." Me: "I don't, I bomb them from orbit."

Karen Avioras
The Raging Raccoons
#5 - 2014-05-09 13:17:14 UTC
uh-oh.
Abrazzar
Vardaugas Family
#6 - 2014-05-09 13:18:36 UTC
"cure depression"
"mood control"
They're just fishing for funding.
Cygnet Lythanea
World Welfare Works Association
#7 - 2014-05-09 13:30:45 UTC
Dave Stark wrote:
that's both awesome, and worrying.


This., Imagine governments giving people mandatory good feelings about their government.
Inxentas Ultramar
Ultramar Independent Contracting
#8 - 2014-05-09 13:57:02 UTC
Adam Jensen would like a word. He never asked for this.
Solecist Project's Alt
Doomheim
#9 - 2014-05-09 14:03:59 UTC
Wrong forum.

*sips orange juice*
James Amril-Kesh
Viziam
Amarr Empire
#10 - 2014-05-09 14:10:19 UTC
All I can see coming from this is a plunge headfirst into absolute plutocracy.

Also yeah this belongs in OOPE.

Enjoying the rain today? ;)

Bischopt
Sebiestor Tribe
Minmatar Republic
#11 - 2014-05-09 14:15:45 UTC
So... you'll be able to watch pron in your head?
Brooks Puuntai
Solar Nexus.
#12 - 2014-05-09 14:16:31 UTC
Transhumanism is something that I hope never comes to pass. I would rather have fully evolved AI then I would full h+. Especially in regards to brain implants.

CCP's Motto: If it isn't broken, break it. If it is broken, ignore it. Improving NPE / Dynamic New Eden

Abrazzar
Vardaugas Family
#13 - 2014-05-09 14:19:38 UTC
Bischopt wrote:
So... you'll be able to watch pron in your head?

Better Than Life chips will be a thing. Why just watch? Why not experience it? Why not experience it much more intense than you really could? Why not fry all your neurons with a three hour continuous orgasm? Only one simple surgical procedure for a chip slot and reality just won't do anymore.
Shivanthar
#14 - 2014-05-09 14:19:49 UTC
Female Agent: "Don't tell me that you're going to a night mission with your sunglasses..."
J.C. Denton: "I have an eye augmentation"

Welcome to Deus-Ex... Never forgot this conversation, use it time to time, yet I've never believed it would actually become a real thing Bear

_Half _the lies they tell about me **aren't **true.

Caviar Liberta
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#15 - 2014-05-09 14:22:48 UTC
Cygnet Lythanea wrote:
Dave Stark wrote:
that's both awesome, and worrying.


This., Imagine governments giving people mandatory good feelings about their government.


And as in 1984, 2+2=5 because you will be taught to accept it as a truth.
Shivanthar
#16 - 2014-05-09 14:24:56 UTC
Caviar Liberta wrote:
Cygnet Lythanea wrote:
Dave Stark wrote:
that's both awesome, and worrying.


This., Imagine governments giving people mandatory good feelings about their government.


And as in 1984, 2+2=5 because you will be taught to accept it as a truth.


Hmm, let's say that; 2 + 2 = 4 + i
Start from there :P

_Half _the lies they tell about me **aren't **true.

Ramona McCandless
Silent Vale
LinkNet
#17 - 2014-05-09 14:27:24 UTC
Utter nonsense

At least because the majority will never be able to afford it, and the tinfoils will rail against it, and like cloning and organ farming it will be banned for religious and psuedo-moralistic reasons.

"Yea, some dude came in and was normal for first couple months, so I gave him director." - Sean Dunaway

"A singular character could be hired to penetrate another corps space... using gorilla like tactics..." - Chane Morgann

Brooks Puuntai
Solar Nexus.
#18 - 2014-05-09 14:42:03 UTC  |  Edited by: Brooks Puuntai
Ramona McCandless wrote:
Utter nonsense

At least because the majority will never be able to afford it, and the tinfoils will rail against it, and like cloning and organ farming it will be banned for religious and psuedo-moralistic reasons.


In the long run cost is never really a factor. With all technology with time the cost will decrease.

Look at computer chips for example, at first even the most basic chip was extremely expensive. Now you can buy throwaway cards that have computer chips in them to play music or even play a video.

CCP's Motto: If it isn't broken, break it. If it is broken, ignore it. Improving NPE / Dynamic New Eden

Tarpedo
Incursionista
#19 - 2014-05-09 14:51:24 UTC  |  Edited by: Tarpedo
Question is - do I really need all of this? Nope. Otherwise I'd purchase some drugs and common store-bought equipment (for example, hearing enhancing devices which selectively boost sounds cost 20-100 bucks - very useful for cyclists on roads, but I prefer to ride without them).
Ramona McCandless
Silent Vale
LinkNet
#20 - 2014-05-09 14:53:37 UTC
Brooks Puuntai wrote:
Ramona McCandless wrote:
Utter nonsense

At least because the majority will never be able to afford it, and the tinfoils will rail against it, and like cloning and organ farming it will be banned for religious and psuedo-moralistic reasons.


In the long run cost is never really a factor. With all technology with time the cost will decrease.

Look at computer chips for example, at first even the most basic chip was extremely expensive. Now you can buy throwaway cards that have computer chips in them to play music or even play a video.


And still millions of people dont have access to a transistor radio let alone a computer due to the cost involved and the fact that food for the majority of people in the world is still a larger part of their spending than anything else

"Yea, some dude came in and was normal for first couple months, so I gave him director." - Sean Dunaway

"A singular character could be hired to penetrate another corps space... using gorilla like tactics..." - Chane Morgann

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