Science: You will be able to plug and play in your brain peripheral devices and get human supersenses.
Yes you are reading right, so right that X-Men will be so yesterday in the very near future, and because the sensations that humans (and other animals) experience from
sense organs like the nose are all processed and interpreted similarly
in the brain, those organs could be augmented, replaced and transformed
to create human superpowers.
"The brain doesn't care what the peripheral devices are that you plug in, like eyes and ears and nose and mouth," said researcher David Eagleman, a neuroscientist at the Baylor College of Medicine in Texas, on Sept. 28 at the Being Human conference, a daylong event focusing on questions about the science and mystery of the human experience. "These are plug-and-play peripheral devices and the brain will figure out how to use it."
Animals experience the world very differently. For instance, bats navigate by sound,
cows have magnetic compasses that help them feel the Earth's magnetic
field, and star-nosed moles have a 20-fingered nose with thousands of
touch receptors that allows them to feel their way through dark,
subterranean tunnels, Eagleman said.
Now many scientists, banking on brain similarities between these
animals and humans, are developing technologies to give humans an
expanded repertoire of supersenses.
Cochlear implants allow the deaf to hear by replacing the sensory organs in the ear with electrical devices.
And sonic glasses can convert audio streams into visual information.
"After a few weeks, people have direct perceptual experience, essentially seeing sound," Eagleman said.
A new technology called Brainport translates visual data into sensory
information that is transmitted to the brain via electrodes on the
tongue. People seeing with their tongues have used Brainport while rock-climbing, Eagleman said.
Eagleman's lab is currently developing a vest with tactile sensors that
convert sound into touch. The idea is to give those who are deaf the
ability to hear via touch.
"This can be 100 times cheaper than you can do a cochlear implant, and it doesn't require an invasive surgery," Eagleman said.
The Future.
The five traditional senses may even be so yesterday: With newer
technology, scientists aim to create completely new senses. For
instance, some researchers are developing technologies to allow humans
to sense weather patterns from up to 200 miles (320 kilometers) away, or
to process the minute fluctuations of the stock market every second.
Other sensory pioneers are getting magnets made of the element neodymium implanted into their fingertips
so they can sense the magnetic field around them. Some even say they
can repair their electronics just by feeling the "color" of the magnetic
field around broken devices, Eagleman said.
"We are no longer a natural species in the sense that we don't have to
wait for Mother Nature's sensory gifts on her timescales," Eagleman
said. "Nature has given us the tools we need to construct our own
experiences."
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