• Science

    The Memory Hacker

    By Posted on 1.22.2008 4 Comments

    In wet lab 412C on the University of Southern California´s Los Angeles campus, Vijay Srinivasan is poking a long, evil-looking needle at a slice of rat brain about half the size of a fingernail. All around him, coils of cable are piled near hulking microscopes. Glass vials and fluid-filled plastic dishes compete for space with spare keyboards and computer chips.

    3.10.2009 at 08:38pm - Comment by irv0

    Ted Berger is operating much like Thomas Edison...trial and error. It works for darwiniwn evolution, but is very time consuming. He will ,no doubt trurn up a large number of useful gadgets; useful in connecting up to the live neurons. Interpreting he results of 100 neurons pales when compared to understanding 10^13th neurons, (the brain's compement). The real trick to emulating human memory is in the nature of recall, finding associations anywhere in the cortex. This might suggest the nature of the neural code for memory I like his work and hope he finds the results he is looking for



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