Monkey Mind Control

The brain activity of one monkey dictated movements of a second, sedated 
animal, a study shows.

By Jef Akst | February 19, 2014

*Rhesus monkeyFLICKR, SHANKAR S. 
<http://www.flickr.com/photos/shankaronline/7568240278/>*

Researchers have used two rhesus monkeys in an intriguing 
proof-of-principle experiment testing the ability to control a paralyzed 
body or limb. They used a machine to covert the brain activity of one 
monkey, called the master, into electrical impulses applied to the spinal 
cord of a sedated animal, called an avatar, which moved in response to the 
stimulation.

The results, published this week (February 17) in *Nature 
Communications*<http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4237>, 
could provide insight for how thoughts might be translated into movement of 
paralyzed patients.

“This work in primates shows how this disconnection between brain and 
controlled movement could be overcome using brain machine interfaces that 
have the ability to identify the user’s intention or desire to perform a 
specific movement and, once identified, how this intended action can be 
translated through neural stimulation into the muscle activations that 
achieve the final goal of the movement,” biomedical engineer Bernard Conway 
of the University of Strathclyde said in a statement. “The work is a key 
step forward that demonstrates the potential of brain machine interfaces to 
be used in restoring purposeful movement to people affected by paralysis.”

The scientists, who hailed from Harvard Medical School, implanted a brain 
chip capable of monitoring 100 neurons into the master monkey, recorded the 
cells’ electrical activity during training, and then matched the patterns 
of neural activity with the physical actions of the monkey. The researchers 
also implanted 36 electrodes in the spinal cord of the avatar monkey, then 
tested how the activation of the electrodes could elicit different 
movements from the animal.

Finally, the team connected the two monkeys to each other, such that the 
activity being recorded from the master’s brain controlled the movements of 
the avatar in real time. The master was to control the movement of a cursor 
using a joystick held by the avatar, and, 98 percent of the time, it 
succeeded.

“The goal is to take people with brain stem or spinal cord paralysis and 
bypass the injury,” Ziv Williams, told *BBC 
News*<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-26224813>. 
“The hope is ultimately to get completely natural movement, I think it’s 
theoretically possible, but it will require an exponential additional 
effort to get to that point.”

“Whilst the control of limbs is sophisticated, it is still rather crude 
overall,” Christopher James of the University of Warwick agreed in a 
statement. Additionally, increased muscle rigidity following paralysis, as 
well as changes in blood pressure, pose challenges for restoring precise 
control.

Nevertheless, James said that the implications of the new research were 
profound, “especially for controlling limbs in spinal cord injury, or 
controlling prosthetic limbs with limb amputees.”

Source: TheScientist
http://www.the-scientist.com//?articles.view/articleNo/39220/title/Monkey-Mind-Control/

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