The Brain as a User Interface
Scientists hijack a rat's brain to robotize the rodent
From: IEEE Spectrum - August 2, 2002 - page 29
By; Samuel K. Moore

Neuroscientist John Chapin and his colleagues at Downstate Medical Center
(New York City), part of the State University of New York (SUNY) in Brooklyn,
NY have used a wireless receiver and electrodes implanted in a rat's brain to
steer the rodent anywhere they want it to go. 

Their research was inspired by the desire to develop brain-controlled
prosthetics, where a critical issue is conversion of sensory signals from the
prosthetic device into brain signals. 

As a first step, Chapin and his colleagues implanted electrodes in a rat's
brain to see how well the rat could understand and respond to electronically
simulated perceptions. The resulting electro-organic hybrid, popularly dubbed
"roborat," beats regular robots by some measures.  

Suppose you want to guide a small robotic system through collapsed buildings
to search for survivors. In pure robotics, this is a tough job. But remotely
guided rats carrying wireless video cameras fit the bill nicely. 

The brain implant developed by Chapin and his colleagues lets them instruct a
trained rat to turn right, turn left, or move forward according to keystrokes
from a laptop as far as 500 meters away. Electrodes are implanted in three
areas of the brain: one in the medial forebrain bundle (MFB), which is
associated with feelings of pleasure, and one each in the left and right
somatosensory cortex, part of the brain that handles the sense of touch. In
particular they implanted the electrodes in the parts of the cortex that
sense the rat's whiskers. 

The rats were then trained to turn right when the brain cells representing
their right whiskers were stimulated, left when the left ones were, and
forward when the MFB, sometimes called the pleasure center, was electrically
tickled. The training worked because the rats were rewarded with an
additional stimulus to the pleasure center whenever they made a correct move. 

Last fall, the instrumented rats were put through their paces at the
Southwest Research Institute (San Antonio, Texas), where the projects
funder, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA, Arlington, VA),
evaluates robots. There, the intrepid animals scrambled over and through
crumbled blocks of concrete, in addition to climbing a tree, walking along a
railroad track, and doing other things lab rats just dont do. 

Also among the first tests was seeing if the rats could be distracted from
their tasks by people, loud noises, and goodies like cheese. But with enough
stimulation to the pleasure center, the rats stayed on the job. "These guys
are having too much fun to eat anything - not even chocolate, and rats are
chocoholics," says Chapin. 

Caption: Robo-hobo: A rat is instructed via a wireless receiver [white box]
and brain implants to walk along a railroad track. 

http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/WEBONLY/resource/aug02/brainimplants.html

