Forum Logikmemorial
Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Janvier 16, 2025, 04:41:36 am
-
Kacs The Magic School Bus Is Back, Bitches
SPLOID is delicious brain candy. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. how its made Daily Newsletter stanley termos (https://www.stanley-cups.ro) You May Also Like stanley thermos (https://www.cup-stanley.it) Tech NewsSploid Watch How Balls of Steel Are Made stanley cup (https://www.stanleycups.co.nz) By Andrew Liszewski Published September 21, 2017 Tech NewsSploid The Process of Making Matches Is Surprisingly Goopy By Casey Chan Published September 16, 2016 Tech NewsSploid How Graphene Is Made By Casey Chan Published June 20, 2016 Xgql How To Be A Fly On the Wall From 100 Feet Up
Closing the Gap But now, a team of neuroscientists from Case Western Reserve University and the Univer vaso stanley (https://www.cups-stanley.es) sity of Kansas Medical Center have devised a solution that appears to work in rats. It an implantable prosthesis called a brain-machine-brain interface that serves as a closed-loop microelectronic system. The device works by recording signals from one part of the brain, processing them in real time, and then linking the injury by stimulating a second part of the brain that has lost connectivity. Essentially, the prosthetic works by bridging the gaps caused by brain injuries, which in turn facilitates repair. Related: Memory implantation is now officially real 鈥?as are stanley thermo (https://www.cups-stanley.com.de) brain-to-brain interfaces. memory-implantation-is-now-officially-real-909746570 Brain-to-brain interfaces have arriv termo stanley (https://www.stanley-cups.com.mx) ed, and they are absolutely mindblowing For the experiment, the researchers mimicked TBI in rats by literally cutting the communications link between the motor and sensory areas required for limb movements. After performing this procedure, the rats were unable to use their forelimbs and grasp for food. To fix this mess, the brain-machine-brain interface 鈥?a microchip on a circuit board smaller than a quarter 鈥?was connected to microelectrodes implanted in two regions, the anterior and posterior parts of the rats ; brain. The neural action potentials were amplified and processed by an algorithm, which were recorded as brain spike activity. As each spike was detected, th