Tag: Science

  • What Is Neuralink:…

    What Is Neuralink:…


    Good afternoon to any futurist science geek. Technology is not in my ‘wheelhouse’; however, I know several of you would find this an interesting read.

    https://towardsdatascience.com/what-is-neuralink-a-look-at-what-it-is-what-it-wants-to-be-and-what-it-could-become-2acf32b51dc5

    What Is Neuralink: A Look At What It Is, What It Wants to Be, and What It Could Become

    Say hello to your sixth sense

    When I first took science class in elementary school, we learned about the five senses. Maybe not far into the future, that information might be as outdated as the idea of nine planets in our solar system (sorry, Pluto). This might be thanks to Neuralink, a company that’s been making headlines for its controversial brain-chip interface. On July 17, 2019, the company finally unveiled its hard work in a YouTube live stream.

    When you first hear it, Neuralink’s pursuit sounds like it comes straight out of a mad genius’s diary; certainly, with Elon Musk at the head of the company, that image might not be a far stretch. But if you look beyond what seems to be a Sci-Fi horror movie, you can get a glimpse of quite a different future for humanity — one that has a new, sixth sense: Neuralink.

    Neuralink Prototypes: the company has gone through years of research prior to its public announcement (Source: Neuralink Launch Event on YouTube)

    What Is Neuralink Right Now?

    Neuralink is a device that will first be used to help paraplegics with simple tasks such as using an iPhone and making mouse clicks on a computer — by making no physical movement. To be clear, human trials have not yet started; Elon Musk and his team are optimistic about beginning by the end of 2020, but they anchor that timeline with the fact that FDA approval is not easy. So far, Neuralink prototypes have been tested on rodents and apparently even a monkey, according to Musk.

    The Part That’s In the Brain

    Neuralink does involve surgically implanting some components onto the surface of your brain. But brain implants are not new — research and development have been going on, tested, and used since the 1970s. It’s just that previously, brain implants have not been considered enhancements; after all, our brains are still a big mystery, and we have only recently started decoding the genetic origins of our intelligence.

    Ideally, we would like to preserve the sanctity of this sacred chamber — and I’m sure Elon Musk (as well as his team) would like to as well. At this point, though, it’s not possible. They realized this by running a test using electrodes, which are devices that are used to detect electric fields (in the brain, electric fields occur when nerves fire messages to one another — i.e., Neuralink uses the electrodes to detect when nerves are sending messages to each other).

    One of the electrodes (we’ll call it Electrode 1) was placed right on the neuron. Because it’s directly on the neuron, it would be able to detect any electrical field generated as a result of the neuron firing. They then placed another electrode (we’ll call it Electrode 2) farther away to see if it could still detect an electric field from the neuron firing. If it could, they moved it farther and farther, until a point where Electrode 2 could no longer detect the neuron’s electrical signal — at that point, Electrode 1 would report that the neuron is firing, but Electrode 2 wouldn’t be able to confirm it. In other words, Electrode 2 was too far from the neuron. That distance was 60 nanometers. Without getting any further into the weeds, the fact is that 60 nanometers means it would have to be inside, not outside, the skull.

    At the very least, the electrodes would need to reside underneath the skull. And that’s exactly what they’re going to do. The electrodes, along with a small receiver, will be fitted underneath the skull. No, you won’t have an antenna sticking out of your head, and no, poles are not impaling your brain.

    N1 Sensor, the first version of the human-embedded chip (Source: Neuralink Launch Event on YouTube) without the outer mold. The mold is a cylindrical 8mm diameter, 4mm tall. Each has 1,204 electrodes.

    Stick out your index finger and try to imagine the chip resting on top. Now you realize just how small it is — it’s certainly smaller than the AirPods I have in my ears right now, which fire signals back and forth with my brain caught in the crossfire. The cylindrical encasing it will be placed in is 8mm in diameter and stands 4mm tall.

    Coming out of the encasing will be 1,024 tiny, thin electrodes that look like microscopic threads. When I say tiny, we are looking at approximately 6 nanometers in diameter. To compare, imagine the diameter of your hair, and then divide that diameter by ten. It’s so small that something as comparatively large as a human hand just won’t be able to install it on the brain. That’s why Neuralink created a robotic surgeon, too.

    The robotic surgeon that places Neuralink N1 electrodes into the brain (Source: Neuralink Launch Event on YouTube)

    This robot has the ability to make the precise movements necessary to install the threads into your brain. It sounds like a simple task, but at the small scale that the threads are, it becomes a task that’s about as complicated as landing a space rocket safely back on Earth — something Musk is all too familiar with.

    These things are really, really small. You really can’t manipulate them with your hand. The threads are peeled off one at a time by the robot to place into the brain… So we had to build a surgical robot… The surgery is not possible without the robot.

    – Max Hodak, President of Neuralink

    That’s because, at that scale, there are other factors that it has to consider; for example, breathing and heartbeat. Both are involuntary. Sure, a person who is not under complete sedation could try to hold his or her breath for the hour-long procedure, but can he or she hold a heartbeat? I don’t think anyone would recommend that.

    You might wonder if poking the brain will just end up in massive headaches from the pain. The answer is no. First of all, the brain does not have any pain receptors, so you won’t feel anything. Second of all, the electrodes are so thin. If the hair analogy isn’t visual enough, think of it like this: those electrodes are thinner than a mosquito’s proboscis (that long needle that comes out when it wants to suck your blood) — the inner part of its mouth, the Labium, is around 40 nanometers in diameter(compared to the electrode’s 6 nanometer diameter). When was the last time you felt a mosquito biting you?

    Take a look at the Neuralink surgical robot in action (Source: Neuralink Launch Event on YouTube)

    The Neuralink surgical robot takes the variables into account when identifying the right areas to place each electrode, minimizing the likelihood of hitting a blood vessel — which would not be good for the brain. In the image above (you can click the source link to go straight to the point in the live stream where they show this video), the top two pieces of footage show the movement of a simulated brain with variables such as heartbeat and breathing, while the bottom left one shows what the robot sees after accounting for these variables — a seemingly still brain.

    The Part That’s Outside the Brain

    Having a bionic superbrain chip robotically implanted in your head is something that most of us would consider a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Musk and his team want to keep it that way. Software updates are already inconvenient, and always happen whenever we don’t want them to. The idea of having to make a trip to the local neurosurgeon every time the software wants to run an update takes away a glimpse of the appeal that having a superbrain might bring. So a large piece of Neuralink resides outside of the skull, as a wearable behind your ear.

    The Neuralink wearable named the Link (source)

    This wearable, called the Link, houses the software as well as the battery. This way, when you’re at 5% battery life, you can just remove the device to recharge. Same with a software update — the processing happens on the Link.

    What Neuralink Wants To Be

    It wants to be a computer inside everyone’s brain — one that we don’t have to carry around in our hands, and that’s undetectable in use. While Elon Musk probably likes the idea of helping out paraplegics, nothing seems to tickle him more than giving our future AI overlords a good kick below the belt. And he believes Neuralink will deliver that blow.

    In the [unmeasurable] future, he sees Neuralink’s brain-chip as elective surgery. That means it won’t be covered by insurance in the United States. Sorry, that last sentence was an irrelevant, sarcastic jab at the joke that is American healthcare. In all seriousness, what it means is that people will want it, not need it. It may become more common around the world than plastic surgery (maybe with the exception of Beverly Hills).

    [Neuralink] is not a mandatory thing. This is a thing you can choose to have if you want. This is something I think will be really important at a civilization-level scale.

    – Elon Musk

    Interestingly enough, Musk says that Neuralink won’t be mandatory, although if every other person around you has a brain the speed of a quantum computer, you might need one for yourself if you want to compete for whatever jobs there might still be for humans at that time. With the assistance of Neuralink, though, John Connor — er, I mean, Musk, believes we can stand a chance against an inevitable Skynet.

    What Neuralink Can Become

    Well, from a capitalist perspective, bigger than Apple or any other existing tech giant (except maybe Amazon, because otherwise where would we go shopping with our minds?). Why do you need an iPhone or an Apple Watch (actually, why do you even need an Apple watch right now…) when you’ve got it all in your head! The success of Neuralink will change the trajectory of future innovation. What once seemed quite innovative and still beyond reach (e.g., augmented reality glasses) now seems a bit outdated when imagining a future with Neuralink.

    But Neuralink can go far beyond the novelties of augmented reality Space Invaders. For example, telepathy is not that farfetched anymore. After all, the signals being received by the electrodes can be wirelessly transmitted to electronic devices, and the Link earpiece itself is an electronic device. Transferring the messages from one Link device to another would be akin to airdropping images between iPhones. Add in a bit of quantum entanglement, and maybe we can make some telepathic phone calls to our Martian families. At this point in time, Neuralink’s technology probably won’t be able to create full sentences from the little firings in your neurons, but it can be trained to translate certain firing patterns into, maybe, images. Or single words. And this type of feature can be improved over time.

    The speed of communication will also improve. Right now, when I’m typing, the speed at which I communicate is limited to the speed at which my fingers can gracefully traverse planet QWERTY. When I’m using my phone, it’s how fast my thumbs can weave. Even when I’m speaking, I can only speak so quickly before I get tongue twisted. But a mind’s thoughts are instant. Neuralink may eventually be able to capture those instant thoughts and transcribe them into instant communication, faster than the words can leave my mouth.

    Another, more edgy use could be as a replacement for drugs — let’s start with the more acceptable, recreational ones. You wouldn’t need to drink coffee, smoke cigarettes, or drink alcohol anymore in order to get their effects. Those businesses may end up in the industry graveyard, replaced by an app version available for $0.99 (maybe for $50, accounting for inflation). Other, more illicit ones, can be abused as well, in a digital manner. This potential does raise questions about how Neuralink intends to regulate the use of its software, including third-party development. Right now, though, governments seem to be busy handling Facebook’s Libra, so it’s a concern they’ll have to deal with at a later date.

    The Future Concerns

    Talking about concerns, there’s a list of that, too. Ransomware, a virus that locks your computer’s files and deletes them one by one until you pay a ransom (usually in Bitcoin), is a serious threat to computer networks today. Now imagine that on your brain. Hacking, software bugs, and hardware defects could be a threat to your daily life.

    In the less-distant future, another concern is Neuralink’s ability to not only read signals, fire its own signals — it’s essentially able to do work on behalf of your neurons. But the brain is very sensitive — it changes throughout an entire lifetime in response to different stimuli, including chemicals and how neurons communicate with each other. Adding Neuralink into the equation could change how our brains develop.

    Neuralink is undeniably an innovative project — one expected of Elon Musk. His tendency to focus on the future, rather than the perceived limitations in existence today, guides others to see the strong potential of this technology or technologies like this one. I’m very eager to imagine more of what it will bring for the future of human intelligence. Will I try version one? At this point, probably not, but I can’t speak for future me.

  • QUIZ: The Salt of Life

    QUIZ: The Salt of Life

    Ever wonder what it means to call something the ‘salt of life’? Is it essential, elemental, earthy, or just tasty?

    What do you know about this ubiquitous substance?

    Take the quiz below and share your results!

    an “Old Salt” 😋
    [HDquiz quiz = “1574”]
  • QUIZ: The Periodic Table

    QUIZ: The Periodic Table

    We are back to the hard sciences today!

    How much do you know about the Periodic Table of Elements?

    Take the quiz below and share your results!

    [HDquiz quiz = “1279”]
  • Quiz: Weather, Planets, & Elements

    Quiz: Weather, Planets, & Elements

    This is a fairly easy science quiz

    I am expecting all A’s!

    Are you smarter than the average science geek?

    Take the quiz below and share your results!

    [HDquiz quiz = “644”]
  • Quiz: Science & Nature

    Quiz: Science & Nature

    Welcome to our very first MVAP developed quiz.

    I have been taking it easy on you up to this point, so be prepared for some challenges

    Today’ quiz is a grab bag of science and nature related questions

    Are you smarter than the average geek?

    Take the quiz below and share your results!

    [HDquiz quiz = “316”]
  • Mariana Ocean Trench

    Mariana Ocean Trench

    Science has never been a “thing” for me; however, I was compelled to do some research. We can thank an app and a book. One evening I was playing an app. Finishing the puzzle required that I answer the question, “What is the deepest ocean trench?”. As if I even knew what such a thing was! Lo and behold, the next evening the very same name/subject occurred in something I was reading. Obviously, there was a message there. You all are about to receive said message, which is a brief thread on ocean trenches and specifically the Mariana Trench.

    What is an “Ocean Trench”

    The National Geographic’s definition says, 

    Ocean trenches are long, narrow depressions on the seafloor. These chasms are the deepest parts of the ocean—and some of the deepest natural spots on Earth. 

    GRAPHIC BY CHRIS HUH, COURTESY WIKIMEDIA. PUBLIC DOMAIN.

    How is an “Ocean Trench” formed?

    Subduction Zones

    When the leading edge of a dense tectonic plate meets the leading edge of a less-dense plate, the denser plate bends downward. This place where the denser plate subducts is called a subduction zone. 

    Oceanic subduction zones almost always feature a small hill preceding the ocean trench itself. This hill, called the outer trench swell, marks the region where the subducting plate begins to buckle and fall beneath the more buoyant plate.

    Some ocean trenches are formed by subduction between a plate carrying continental crust and a plate carrying oceanic crust. Continental crust is always much more buoyant than oceanic crust, and oceanic crust will always subduct. 

    For more information on Ocean Trenches, you can go to, 

    National Geographic: RESOURCE LIBRARY | ENCYCLOPEDIC ENTRY Ocean trench

    It is very in-depth.

    Now, moving on to what caused The Mariana Trench. There were a couple of sources of available. Having been raised with a full set of the Encyclopedia Britannica

    I decided to use their information. 

    Mariana Trench

    May 22, 2020

    Mariana Trench, also called Marianas Trenchdeep-sea trench in the floor of the western North Pacific Ocean, the deepest such trench known on Earth, located mostly east as well as south of the Mariana Islands. It is part of the western Pacific system of oceanic trenches coinciding with subduction zones—points where two adjacent tectonic plates collide, one being forced below the other. An arcing depression, the Mariana Trench stretches for more than 1,580 miles (2,540 km) with a mean width of 43 miles (69 km). The greatest depths are reached in Challenger Deep, a smaller steep-walled valley on the floor of the main trench southwest of Guam. The Mariana Trench, which is situated within the territories of the U.S. dependencies of the Northern Mariana Islandsand Guam, was designated a U.S. national monument in 2009.

    Mariana Arc Cross section of the Mariana Arc showing the Mariana Trench. The diagram was generated by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration following the 2004 Pacific Ring of Fire expedition.Dr. Robert W. Embley—PMEL/NOAA

    Measuring the greatest depths in the Mariana Trench is an exceedingly difficult task, given the technical challenges of delivering instrumentation to such a remote location and then obtaining accurate readings. The first attempt was made in 1875 during the Challenger Expedition (1872–76), when a sounding of 26,850 feet (8,184 metres) was obtained near the southern end of the trench. In 1899 Nero Deep (31,693 feet [9,660 metres]) was discovered southeast of Guam. That sounding was not exceeded until a 32,197-foot (9,813-metre) hole was found in the vicinity 30 years later. In 1957, during the International Geophysical Year, the Soviet research ship Vityaz sounded a new world record depth of 36,056 feet (10,990 metres) in Challenger Deep. That value was later increased to 36,201 feet (11,034 metres). Since then several measurements of the Challenger Deep have been made, using increasingly sophisticated electronic equipment. Notable among these is the depth of 35,840 feet (10,924 metres) reported by a Japanese expedition in 1984 and one of 36,070 feet (10,994 metres) obtained by a U.S. research team in 2011. In addition, another deep hole—originally called HMRG Deep (for Hawaii Mapping Research Group, the discoverers of the location) and later renamed Sirena Deep—is situated south of Guam and east of Challenger Deep. First encountered in 1997, its depth has been reported variously as 34,911 and 35,463 feet (10,641 and 10,809 metres).

    Britannica: Mariana Trench/trench, Pacific Ocean