Title: Bionics 3
1Bionics 3
- Kevin Warwick
- www.kevinwarwick.com
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Warwick
2Animals Experiments
- Animal testing/experiments can be questioned from
an ethical viewpoint - Interested here more in neural aspects
- Not chemical
- Not external
- Behavioural?
- Humans are animals!
3Pavlovs Dogs
- Pavlov performed experiments on digestion which
earned him the 1904 Nobel Prize. These included
surgically extracting portions of the digestive
system from animals, severing nerve bundles to
determine the effects, and implanting valves
between digestive organs and an external pouch to
examine the organ's contents.
4Pavlovs Dogs
- Research on reflex actions involved involuntary
reactions to stress and pain. Pavlov began the
study of transmarginal inhibition (TMI), the
body's natural response of shutting down when
exposed to overwhelming stress or pain. His
research showed that all temperament types
responded to the stimuli the same way, but
different temperaments move through the responses
at different times. He felt this was due to a
different type of nervous system.
5Pavlovs Dogs
- It is popularly believed that Pavlov always
signalled the occurrence of food by ringing a
bell. However, his writings record the use of a
wide variety of stimuli, including whistles,
tuning forks and visual stimuli, in addition to
ringing a bell. - Carl Jung continued Pavlov's work on TMI and
correlated the observed shutdown types in animals
with his own introverted and extroverted
temperament types in humans. Introverted persons,
he believed, were more sensitive to stimuli and
reached a TMI state earlier. - William Sargent continued the behavioural
research in mental conditioning to achieve memory
implantation and brainwashing.
6José Delgado
- Delgado used what he called a stimoceiver, a
radio which joined a stimulator of brain waves
with a receiver which monitored EEG waves and
sent them back on separate radio channels. - He said that Radio Stimulation of different
points in the amygdala and hippocampus produces a
variety of effects, including pleasant
sensations, elation, deep, thoughtful
concentration, odd feelings, super relaxation,
coloured visions, and other responses.
7José Delgado
- Once Delgado stepped into the ring with a bull
which had had a stimoceiver implanted. The bull
charged Delgado, who pressed a remote control
button which caused the bull to stop. Delgado
claimed that the stimulus caused the bull to lose
its aggressive instinct. - Delgado believed that his experiment with a
female chimpanzee named Paddy was more
significant. Paddy was fitted with a stimoceiver
that detected a brain signal called a spindle.
When a spindle was detected, the stimoceiver
responded with a signal to the central gray area
of Paddy's brain, producing an 'aversive
reaction'. Within hours her brain was producing
many fewer spindles.
8Cockroach Backpack
- At the University of Tokyo electrodes were
inserted into the antennae of a cockroach
signals were sent to cause the cockroach to go
forwards/backwards, left/right.
9Lamprey
- At Northwestern University, Mussa-Ivaldi built a
two-wheeled robot that operated on the electrical
signals of a lampreys brain. The part of the
brain used in the experiment normally keeps the
lamprey upright in the water. When connected up
correctly, the organ can guide the robot towards
a light source.
10Miguel Nicolelis
- Miguel Nicolelis at Duke University, North
Carolina, wired a monkey brain to control a robot
arm that mimicked the motions of its real arm.
"It was an amazing sight to see the robot in my
lab move, knowing that it was being driven by
signals from a monkey brain at Duke," said
Massachusetts Institute of Technology's
Mandayam Srinivasan. "It was as if the monkey had
a 600-mile- (950-km-) long virtual arm. - KW comment no direct feedback (only visual).
11John Chapin
- Remote controlled rats! Movement signals are
transmitted from a computer to the rat's brain
via a radio receiver strapped to its back. One
electrode stimulates the "feelgood" center of the
rat's brain, while two other electrodes activate
the cerebral regions which process signals from
its left and right.
12John Chapin II
- In a separate experiment John implanted
electrodes into the planning area in the brains
of 6 rats. - The rats were taught to push a lever to obtain a
liquid treat. - Signals were sent via the implant to cause the
treat to be released without the need for the rat
to actually push the lever. - 4 out of 6 rats learned they didnt need to push
the lever thinking about pushing it was fine.
13Brain Stimulation
- In 1870, two German researchers named Hitzig and
Fritsch electrically stimulated the brains of
dogs, demonstrating that certain portions of the
brain were the centres of motor function. - Bartholow, within four years, demonstrated that
the same was true of human beings. - By the turn of the twentieth century Krause was
able to do a systematic electrical mapping of the
human brain, using conscious patients undergoing
brain surgery.
14Hess
- Hess, began his research into Electrical
Stimulation of the Brain in the 1930s, jolting
patients' brains with shocks administered through
tiny needles that pierced the skull. - His experiments included the insertion of fine
electrically conductive wires into the brains of
anaesthetized cats. - Given mild electrical stimulation the cats went
beserk.
15Penfield
- During the 1940s and 50s, Penfield experimented
with electrical brain stimulation on human
patients undergoing surgery. - One of Penfield's discoveries was that the
application on alert patients could stimulate the
memory of past events.
16Pleasure??
- In 1956, Olds reported on research in which he
had electrically stimulated the brains of rats. - Implanting electrodes in rats' pleasure centre of
the brain, he attached a button that allowed the
rats to activate the electrical impulse
themselves. - The rats were able to choose between food and
immediate pleasure. - Olds found that the rats became so obsessed with
self-stimulation that they would literally starve
themselves to death. - Later repeated with monkeys
17Monkeys
- Using high-tech brain scans on monkeys,
researchers determined that a small clump of
cells are active in the formation of the desire
(plan) to carry out specific body movements. - Armed with this knowledge, researchers at CALTECH
implanted electrodes in the cortex of a rhesus
monkey trained to play a simple video game. - A computer program, hooked up to the implanted
electrodes then moved a cursor on the computer
screen in accordance with the monkey's desires -
left or right, up or down.
18Tipu Aziz/Parkinson
- Tipus work involves inducing Parkinsonian
symptoms in monkeys, either surgically or
chemically, then switching off the symptoms using
implanted electrodes. - As many as 40,000 PD people around the world have
benefitted from the technique. - The technique, which Aziz pioneered in the UK,
has been shown to alleviate symptoms in human
sufferers of PD and dystonia. - Patients have electrodes permanently implanted in
their brains, wires are attached under the skin
to a control chip, and a battery inserted into
the chest. - We will look at this in more depth later in the
course
19Cultured Neural Network
- Culture brain cells directly on to a recording
surface and re-embody the brain within a
robotic body.
- Multi-Electrode Array (MEA) allows recording from
128 electrodes across the entire culture.
200?m
TiN Electrodes 30?m diameter
Neurone
20Embodiment
- Re-embodiment is essential
- Without it the neurones are simply talking to
themselves resulting in no meaningful input /
output relationship. - This can be demonstrated in animals that have
developed in a sensory deprived environment the
relative areas of the brain simply do not form
the appropriate connections and the animal has
limited functionality. - Embodying the culture with a robot body means
that its actions will result in specific sensory
input which in turn should influence future
decisions.
21Previous work
Animat (Potters group) Created a closed loop
system which successfully demonstrated approach
/ avoidance behaviour. Used a similar
system to fly a simulated plane. Angle of roll
mapped on to culture, plane stable in
strong simulated winds. T. B., Demarse, D. A.
Wagenaar, A. W. Blau and S. M. Potter, (2001).
The neurally controlled Animat biological
brains acting with simulated bodies. Autonomous
Robots no.11, pp.305310
22Methodology
- Culture to Robot Mapping
- How can the activity of the culture be mapped to
the robots actuators and the robots sensors on
to stimulate the culture. - Biological Aspects
- The methods behind culturing maintaining and
interfacing with neurones. - Neural signal interpretation
- - Dimensionality reduction and processing before
sending to robot.
23Culture Protocol
- MEAs coated with PDL (Poly-d-lysine) which allows
neurones to adhere to the surface - Primary cortical neurones enzymatically
dissociated this breaks down the connective
tissue before trituration which breaks off the
axons and dendrites effectively leaving neural
cells in a blank state. - Dissociated cells are suspended in media and
added to the MEA chamber. - Cells are fed day 1 and every 4 days after with a
glucose based media - After a 1-2 days connections spontaneously reform
and begin to resume activity, initially with
single spikes and after roughly a week complex
burst patterns are seen.
24Protocol Modifications
- Selective coating allows the neural density to be
increased near the electrodes - The use of younger animals may result in
undifferentiated cells that are be able to adjust
to be the most suitable cell type for the
location they land in.
25Spike Sorting
- A single electrode may pick up signals from over
100 neurones. - It is essential to extract the useful signals
from the noise and attempt to separate out the
spikes from different neurones. - Spikes that originate from different neurones
have different voltage profiles (shapes)
although this is not always true. - Before transmitting this information to the robot
- need to apply some form of dimensionality
reduction, possibly involving Principal Component
Analysis (PCA)
263rd Generation (40 magnification)
200 ?m