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The Borg Are One Step Closer

Who said the Borg came from another part of the galaxy. We are taking the first steps to assimilate ourselves into our own collective. And it is all being done in the name of science. Doesn’t Star Trek teach us not to play with implants?

borg1A ‘telepathy’ chip that allows people to control computers, televisions and light switches by the power of thought is being developed by British scientists. The tiny sensor would sit on the surface of the brain, picking up the electrical activity of nerve cells and passing the signal wirelessly to a receiver on the skull. The signal would then be used to control a cursor on a computer screen, operate electronic gadgets or steer an electric wheelchair.

The chip is the brainchild of Dr Jon Spratley, 28, from Stevenage, Hertfordshire, who developed a prototype during his PhD at Birmingham University. ‘We are just trying to help people with severe communication problems or motor neurone disease – like Dr Stephen Hawking or Christopher Reeve,’ he said. ‘What we have designed would allow them to control a computer with their thoughts. If they imagine their muscles moving, that could flick a light switch for example. ‘It’s an area that is being heavily researched in America but so far all the tests have involved wired sensors. This prototype uses wireless technology to remove the risk of infection and that’s the real drive of our work. ‘The eventual aim would be to see these systems fully working so they are available to help patients communicate. That’s the future.’ The 1.3mm ‘multi-contact brain probe’ has yet to be tested on a living person or animal. However, tests on brain slices in a laboratory have been promising.

Dr Spratley’s invention is a tiny sensor designed to be injected by needle into the brain. The chip has 50 ‘contact spikes’ that connect to nerve cells in the brain. As the needle is withdrawn, four coil antennae – each just 1mm across – are unfurled on the surface of the brain. These communicate wirelessly with a ‘base station’ – a 16mm diameter receiver that is permanently placed in the hole left by the needle.

borg2The device picks up neural signals from the brain’s motor cortex and transmits the impulses via the base station to a receiver connected to a computer. Dr Spratley said just seven unique ‘thought commands’ are needed to provide mouse-like controls for a computer. He believes implanting the chips will require minimal invasive surgery – yet could change the life of a quadriplegic or motor neurone disease sufferer. ‘It began as an investigation into what signals paralysed people can generate,’ he said. ‘If they can imagine using a limb, even if they can’t move it, you can tap into that signal. ‘Then you just have to imagine moving the muscle and the leg will move, the brain will train itself.

Dr Spratley, who now works for Cambridgeshire-based company 42 Technology, says the wireless chip is safer. ‘My work was only ever going to be the tip of the iceberg and I hope eventually it will help people. I am glad they are taking it forward.’

He is now looking for funding to start human trials.

- From Prophecy News Watch

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