Categories: Future Tech

Scientists Developing Device to ‘Hack’ Into Brain of Stephen Hawking

Hawking, 70, has been working with scientists at Standford University who are developing  the iBrain – a tool which picks up brain waves and communicates them via a computer.

The scientist, who has motor neurone disease and lost the power of speech nearly 30 years ago, currently uses a computer to communicate but is losing the ability as the condition worsens.

But he has been working with Philip Low, a professor at Stanford and inventor of the iBrain, a brain scanner that measures electrical activity.

“We’d like to find a way to bypass his body, pretty much hack his brain,” said Prof Low. Researchers will unveil their latest results at a conference in Cambridge next month, and may demonstrate the technology on Hawking.

In a release for the conference, Hawking and Low described how the physicist had learnt to create patterns of impulses by imagining moving his hands and limbs.

It is hoped that as the technology becomes more advanced it could recognise more sophisticated brain activity and turn it into words. Scientists hope that it may soon be able to “read a person’s mind,” playing a major role in a medical breakthrough.

“This is very exciting for us because it allows us to have a window into the brain. We’re building technology that will allow humanity to have access to the human brain for the first time,” said Prof Low.

“The emergence of such biomarkers opens the possibility to link intended movements to a library of words and convert them into speech, thus providing motor neurone sufferers with communication tools more dependent on the brain than on the body.”

Last summer, Low traveled to Cambridge where he met with Hawking, who was asked to think “very hard” about completing various tasks while wearing the device.

Beyond mind reading, the device has potential medical applications, such as enlisting the iBrain to help doctors prescribe the correct levels of medication based on a person’s brainwave responses.

In addition, Low says the iBrain could be used to help treat sleep disorders, depression and even autism. This is the first step to personalized medicine,” Low said.

Via: The Telegraph

Prateek Panda

Prateek is the Founder of TheTechPanda. He's passionate about technology startups and entrepreneurship and enjoys speaking to new founders every day. Prateek has also been consistently regarded as one of the top marketing experts in the region.

Recent Posts

New tech on the block: FinTech, travel tech, AI, data streaming, cloud, agtech, EdTech

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent tech launches. FinTech: A new-age fintech company…

13 hours ago

Guardians of blockchain: Reinforcing cybersecurity in the digital age

In the ever-evolving world of tech and global connectivity the cyber space is vulnerable to…

14 hours ago

Geek Appeal: New gadgets & apps on the block

The Tech Panda takes a look at recently launched gadgets & apps in the market.…

4 days ago

Agtech foreign expansion & incoming business: Helping the farmer within & beyond shores

With the realization that the farmer is one of the most crucial aspects of any…

4 days ago

Elevating Your Daily Developer Experience: Unveiling the 3 Development Phases

Intro Have you ever been irritated by the thought of having to go through all…

1 week ago

‘Upskilling in scalable way will need a pedagogy shift’

AI is about to open up careers for today’s youth in great numbers and ways.…

1 week ago