Scientists have engineered something close to a mind meld in
a pair of lab rats, linking the animals' brains electronically so that they
could work together to solve a puzzle. And this brain-to-brain connection
stayed strong even when the rats were 2,000 miles apart.
The experiments were undertaken by Duke neurobiologist
Miguel Nicolelis, who is best known for his work in making mind-controlledprosthetics.
For the new experiments, Nicolelis and his colleagues
trained pairs of rats to press a certain lever when a light went on in their
cage. If they hit the right lever, they got a sip of water as a reward.
When one rat in the pair called the "encoder"
performed this task, the pattern of its brain activity — something like a
snapshot of its thought process — was translated into an electronic signal sent
to the brain of its partner rat, the "decoder," in a separate
enclosure. The light did not go off in the decoder's cage, so this animal had
to crack the message from the encoder to know which lever to press to get the
reward.
The decoder pressed the right lever 70 percent of the time,
the researchers said.
The near mind merger was achieved with microelectrodes
implanted in the part of the animals' cortex that processes motor information.
And the brain-to-brain interface, which Nicolelis describes as an "organic
computer," worked both ways: If the decoder chose the wrong lever, the
encoder rat didn't get a full reward, which encouraged the two to work
together.
"We saw that when the decoder rat committed an error,
the encoder basically changed both its brain function and behavior to make it easier
for its partner to get it right," Nicolelis explained in a statement.
"The encoder improved the signal-to-noise ratio of its brain activity that
represented the decision, so the signal became cleaner and easier to detect.
And it made a quicker, cleaner decision to choose the correct lever to press.
Invariably, when the encoder made those adaptations, the decoder got the right
decision more often, so they both got a better reward."
The connection was not lost even when the signals were sent
over the Internet and the rats placed on two different continents, 2,000 miles
(3,219 kilometers) apart. The researchers say the results held true when the
decoder rat was in a Duke lab in North Carolina and the encoder was with
Nicolelis' colleagues at in Brazil, at the Edmond and Lily Safra International
Institute of Neuroscience of Natal (ELS-IINN).
The researchers are working on experiments to link the minds
of more than two animals (this is something Nicolelis calls a
"brain-net") to see if they could solve more complex problems
cooperatively.
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