john hawks weblog

paleoanthropology, genetics and evolution

cyborgs

  • Machine memory

    Tue, 2009-08-11 11:40 -- John Hawks

    John Zogby polled Americans on whether they'd like to become cyborgs. Some of the questions are about brain implants for health, others for information or "entertainment".

    --If you could have the Internet wired directly into your brain, would you do so?
    Yes: 13%
    No: 82%
    Not sure: 5%.

    By comparison, around 10 percent of Americans have been prescribed antidepressants of some kind. I can imagine the idea of brain tinkering might be marketed in a similar way. Certainly, when you see actual research on microchip-neuron interfaces now, it's pitched as a way to directly influence pain networks, or rehabilitate lost tissue or nerve connections. In other words, medical utility.

    Seems to me, that there's a lot of money people spend on expensive colleges that might be spent on technology instead, if it could enable the same opportunities. Microsoft Encarta destroyed the market for paper encyclopedias; Wikipedia killed the market for Encarta. Could a microchip kill the market for Harvard?

    Anyway, you can count me in the 82 percent. It seems to me that Brain Internet has only one really practical use: the Matrix will use your brain to do character recognition. You know, like ReCaptcha.

    Which pretty much makes the wetware brain a complicated way of gold farming.

  • Becoming bionic

    Mon, 2008-06-23 20:03 -- John Hawks

    A couple of months ago, the Washington Post ran an article by Michael Chorost, who has written a book about his experience with a cochlear implant. I meant to link it at the time, but got it lost on a different computer. The book is titled, Rebuilt, with alternate subtitles in paperback and hardcover editions. The Post article is titled, "Confessions of a Bionic Man":

    My implants don't aid my hearing. They create my hearing.

    What I hear is, quite literally, a computer simulation of real sound. The day my first implant was activated in 2001, voices sounded bizarre; the radio might as well have been in Esperanto. That was because the software couldn't reproduce all the aspects of a normal auditory system. Still, I learned how to recognize consonants and vowels again by listening to books on tape. Now I can turn on the radio and hear it all but effortlessly.

    In 2005, I got new software that made music sound brighter and clearer. The software's improved frequency resolution enabled me to distinguish between tones that had sounded identical before. It was a simple upload; no surgery was necessary.

    Chorost also maintains a blog, discussing the themes of the book and his experiences promoting it. He provides an interesting account of his experiences conversing and interacting (sometimes uncomfortably) with deaf advocates of signing:

    One burly fellow with enormous wrists introduced himself to me as having been in the classroom during a two-hour debate I had at Gallaudet last year with Dirksen Bauman’s students. That debate had the feel of history, of titanic forces clashing: the passion of the deaf community colliding with a technology that penetrates and transforms everything it meets. I’d spoken with candor. I’d said, Look, ninety-six percent of the deaf children born in this country are born to hearing parents. Offered a technology that lets their child hear, what do you think they’re going to choose? But I’d also said that sign language and the community sustained by it are precious, and that their disappearance would be a tragedy. I offered no easy answers, because I had none. Everyone was unsettled. Nothing was settled. At the end of the debate I felt worn out and anxious. Anxious, because I wondered if I had alienated them. I had wanted to build bridges, and I wondered if I had.

    I happen to be reading Ray Kurzweil's book, and this article (and blog) make a more tangible example than many of the speculations that Kurzweil provides. It is sort of a best-case example, considering that a cochlear implant is intended to exploit brain areas that already exist and are tuned for interpreting auditory information. But the "upgrade" that Chorost describes is an incredible example of the way that technology can be improved once it is enabled.

Subscribe to cyborgs

Neandertals

For years, I've worked on their bones. Now I'm working on their genes. Read more about the science studying these ancient people.

Denisova

From a finger bone of an ancient human came the record of a completely unexpected population. My lab is working on the science of the Denisova genome.

Acceleration

The advent of agriculture caused natural selection to speed up greatly in humans. We're uncovering some of the ways that populations have rapidly changed during the last 10,000 years.

Malapa

Just outside Johannesburg, the Malapa site is producing some of the most exciting finds in human evolution. This site is the headquarters of the Malapa Soft Tissue Project.