Researchers at Brown University
have successfully harnessed the power of a monkey’s brain to control
the movement of a cursor on a computer screen. Three monkeys were
taught to play a computer game using a joystick to move the cursor and
chase a moving target on the screen. Then a very small, thinly-wired
device was implanted into each monkey’s brain. This thumbnail-sized
device uses a tiny array of electrodes to record, interpret, and
reconstruct brain activity that controls hand movement. After the
implants, the monkeys still moved the joysticks with their hands. The
joysticks, however, had been completely disconnected, and the monkeys
were actually controlling the cursor on the computer screen with their
thoughts. The monkey’s brain rather than their hands moved the cursor.
Researchers reported that the monkeys’ hands-free cursor control was
almost as fast and accurate as the hands-on cursor control.
In past experiments of this nature, implants were bulky; learning to
control them was cumbersome. These latest tests proved that implants
can be small and easy to operate. The structure of these implants are
so miniscule that future devices could easily be wireless.
Perfecting the link between mind and machine with such a system may
enable those who cannot move or speak to communicate with the world.
Thought-control may also be used to manipulate prosthetics for limbless
patients. This concept is now poised to open the world to thousands who
are trapped or limited by their own bodies. Such a successful
experiment could pave the way to a future when the paralyzed may
communicate, send e-mail, write letters, surf the Web, and command
computer resources simply by thinking about them.