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Simeon Spearman

How Your Brain Connects the Future to the Past - Jeff Brown and Mark Fenske - Your Heal... - 0 views

  • Although each of us is born with proactive brain, it's possible to enhance its performance. Here are some tips: Give your brain a rich bank of life experiences. Expose it to diverse environments and situations. Increasing the breadth of your experiences provides richer information for your brain to draw on as it helps you anticipate new situations. Let it borrow from the experiences of others by communicating, reading, or interacting with or about others. Think about what you want from the future. Take time to reflect on individual and team values and goals, both immediate and down the road. These will help guide your brain as it envisions future scenarios that may best help you achieve your objectives. Actively ponder future rewards or accomplishments. Emphasize rich, detailed thinking about long-term outcomes. This reduces the lure (and the danger) of instant gratification. Give yourself periods of relatively uninterrupted thought during which you let your mind wander. Doing this gives the brain's memory system extra time to recombine your prior experiences in ways that can help you envision future possibilities.
John Rich

Scientists Used CRISPR to Put a GIF Inside a Living Organism's DNA - MIT Technology Review - 0 views

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    "Scientists Used CRISPR to Put a GIF Inside a Living Organism's DNA" -If we can encode data and process it (bio-computing) at a cellular level then our entire bodies become our brains. I.e our brain mass increases by a factor of X20-X30. We still have the processing time barrier unless our "bio-computer" bodies are quantum computers...
Ivy Chang

Kinect + Brain Scan = Augmented Reality for Neurosurgeons - IEEE Spectrum - 0 views

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    Microsoft Research Cambridge team built an augmented reality system to help brain surgeons visualize 3D brain scans.
Simeon Spearman

The brain speaks: Scientists decode words from brain signals - 0 views

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    University of Utah researchers have successfully translated brain signals into words, which could lead the way toward making it possible for paralyzed people to communicate with their thoughts. The scientists recorded the brain signals while the patient repeatedly read 10 words that could be useful to a paralyzed person: yes, no, hot, cold, hungry, thirsty, hello, goodbye, more and less. Though the team made a lot of progress, the research has still not reached the level of accuracy good enough for a device to translate a paralyzed person's thoughts into words spoken by a computer. 
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    daily urmyhero 9.21
Ivy Chang

New Google Glass App Can Read Your Mind, Snap and Share Photos - SocialTimes - 1 views

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    The app MindRDR works with NeuroSky's commercially available brain monitor called MindWave Mobile to detect increased levels of brain activity during periods of high concentration
Ivy Chang

First-ever noninvasive mind-controlled robotic arm - College of Engineering at Carnegie... - 1 views

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    A team of researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, in collaboration with the University of Minnesota, has made a breakthrough in the field of noninvasive robotic device control. Using a noninvasive brain-computer interface (BCI), researchers have developed the first-ever successful mind-controlled robotic arm exhibiting the ability to continuously track and follow a computer cursor.
Emily Knab

Sensory hijack: rewiring brains to see with sound | KurzweilAI - 0 views

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    glasses with a camera are synced to a laptop that translates visuals into sounds. the person wears earphones to hear sounds that change depending on what object is around according to size. apparently people eventually report seeing objects bc of a re-wiring of the brain. fuckin a, man.
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    weekly 8.19
Emily Knab

This is Your Brain Picking Magazine Covers | Peter Kafka | MediaMemo | AllThingsD - 0 views

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    example of a magazine, NewScientist, using neuromarketing to determine how the brain reponds to different pitches/campaigns
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