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30 Oct 20:03

"To test the idea, they recorded brain activity in another seven people undergoing epilepsy surgery,..."

To test the idea, they recorded brain activity in another seven people undergoing epilepsy surgery, while they looked at a screen that displayed text from either the Gettysburg Address, John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address or the nursery rhyme Humpty Dumpty.

Each participant was asked to read the text aloud, read it silently in their head and then do nothing. While they read the text out loud, the team worked out which neurons were reacting to what aspects of speech and generated a personalised decoder to interpret this information. The decoder was used to create a spectrogram – a visual representation of the different frequencies of sound waves heard over time. As each frequency correlates to specific sounds in each word spoken, the spectrogram can be used to recreate what had been said. They then applied the decoder to the brain activity that occurred while the participants read the passages silently to themselves (see diagram).

Despite the neural activity from imagined or actual speech differing slightly, the decoder was able to reconstruct which words several of the volunteers were thinking, using neural activity alone (Frontiers in Neuroengineering, doi.org/whb).

The algorithm isn’t perfect, says Stephanie Martin, who worked on the study with Pasley. “We got significant results but it’s not good enough yet to build a device.”

In practice, if the decoder is to be used by people who are unable to speak it would have to be trained on what they hear rather than their own speech. “We don’t think it would be an issue to train the decoder on heard speech because they share overlapping brain areas,” says Martin.

The team is now fine-tuning their algorithms, by looking at the neural activity associated with speaking rate and different pronunciations of the same word, for example. “The bar is very high,” says Pasley. “Its preliminary data, and we’re still working on making it better.”

The team have also turned their hand to predicting what songs a person is listening to by playing lots of Pink Floyd to volunteers, and then working out which neurons respond to what aspects of the music. “Sound is sound,” says Pasley. “It all helps us understand different aspects of how the brain processes it.”

"Ultimately, if we understand covert speech well enough, we’ll be able to create a medical prosthesis that could help someone who is paralysed, or locked in and can’t speak," he says.



- Brain decoder can eavesdrop on your inner voice (via fuckyeahdarkextropian)
30 Oct 20:00

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30 Oct 17:48

Good things come to those who wait, Michael George Haddad









Good things come to those who wait, Michael George Haddad

30 Oct 16:08

Leaks to US news media are as bad as terrorism, says new Defense directive

by Xeni Jardin
"Unauthorized disclosures of classified information, leaks to the news media, acts of espionage, and certain other information security offenses are now to be collectively designated as 'serious security incidents,' according to a Department of Defense directive that was published this week." [FAS]
30 Oct 12:22

Thorn collar, Thierry Mugler



Thorn collar, Thierry Mugler

30 Oct 09:11

iguanamouth: youre gonna look so goddamn cool







iguanamouth:

youre gonna look so goddamn cool

30 Oct 05:04

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29 Oct 23:57

kadrey: William Burroughs and his hatchet-carved Jack O’...



kadrey:

William Burroughs and his hatchet-carved Jack O’ Lantern.

29 Oct 21:27

/r/EbolaHoax

by rubbercat@gmail.com (Adam "rubber cat" Jameson)
/r/EbolaHoax - Satan's convoluted plan to kill billions!
29 Oct 19:34

Ren Ri Creates Fascinating Geometric Sculptures with the Help of Bees

by Nastia Voynovskaya
Chinese artist and beekeeper Ren Ri collaborates with the stinging, black-and-yellow insects to create sculptures catalyzed by natural processes. The artist builds geometric, plastic forms and plants the queen bee in the center before introducing the rest of the hive. The bees naturally build their habitat around the wooden sticks inside of structure, creating organic, irregular shapes that contrast with the pristine plastic prisms that encase them.
29 Oct 19:20

A Somerville startup thinks robot duels will be the next big sport

by Scott Kirsner
What better week than Halloween to launch a crowdfunding campaign to build 15-foot tall battle bots with cannons for arms? A trio of techies are hoping to raise $1.8 million for MegaBots, a Somerville startup that envisions a new sports league featuring humanoid robots with actual humans at the controls. And those willing to donate $2,500 to the project will get a chance to engage in combat — sometime in 2016. Read More
29 Oct 19:18

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29 Oct 19:04

Bill Gates releases swarm of mosquitos on audience

by Joshua Keating
Mattalyst

Somebody likes that Oprah gif a little too much.

29 Oct 15:03

The 'kinky defense' in Canada's sex scandal

Mattalyst

Props to CNN for making a serious effort to explain the difference between BDSM and abuse.

The Jian Ghomeshi sex scandal is of particular interest to the kink community, who say it raises two common topics of concern in their world: discrimination over sexual activity, and the gray area between consensual activity and assault in BDSM.
29 Oct 14:45

Did Russia Just Hack the White House?

by Russell Berman

Intruders are trying to crash the White House inside and out. While the Secret Service tries to clamp down on people jumping the fence along Pennsylvania Avenue, federal authorities have been battling gatecrashers of the cyber variety.

Hackers who may have been working for the Russian government succeeded in breaching unclassified networks at the White House earlier this month, leading to disruptions as U.S. authorities moved to secure the building's computers.

A White House official confirmed Wednesday morning that authorities "identified activity of concern on the unclassified Executive Office of the President network."

"Any such activity is something we take very seriously. In this case, we took immediate measures to evaluate and mitigate the activity," the official said. "Our actions are ongoing, and some have resulted in some temporary outages and loss of connectivity for our users."

The computers and systems were not damaged and the hackers did not reach more tightly secured secret material. It was the response to the breach, and not the cyberattacks themselves, that caused "temporary disruptions to some services," the official said. A White House reporter for Roll Call noted late last week in a pool report and Tuesday night on Twitter that the building's email system had been down "for extended periods."

Russia and China have repeatedly been accused of launching cyberattacks against U.S. government and military networks. In this case, the Russian government is suspected, according to The Washington Post, which cited sources in reporting that "the nature of the target is consistent with a state-sponsored campaign."

The breach was first discovered two to three weeks ago after the U.S. was alerted to it by an ally, The Post reported on Tuesday night.

This article was originally published at http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/10/white-house-hacked/382063/








29 Oct 12:26

alex-v-hernandez: wormwoman: Outlander Best series.



alex-v-hernandez:

wormwoman:

Outlander

Best series.

29 Oct 12:17

Love this painting by #beautifulbizarre Issue 005 featured...



Love this painting by #beautifulbizarre Issue 005 featured artist Casey Weldon. All back issue of #beautifulbizarre available from www.beautifulbizarre.net/shop

29 Oct 12:13

The Obama Administration Has Been More Hostile to the Press Than Any Other in History

by zeeshan@mic.com (Zeeshan Aleem)
29 Oct 00:14

Dartmouth college paper issues correction

by Mark Frauenfelder
Mattalyst

The fourth estate.

[via]

28 Oct 23:27

Tell me lies

28 Oct 20:12

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28 Oct 19:38

VICE Premiere: Joseph Keckler's Teen Goth Relapse

by VICE Photography

This video is an account of an afternoon in which New York performance artist Joseph Keckler left the office to go downtown and channel the romantic figure of the wanderer. It was made with with his longtime collaborator, filmmaker Laura Terruso, and comes out of Keckler's much lauded performance piece, I Am an Opera, which the Village Voice called a "tantalizing song cycle–cum–multimedia one-man show" before naming Keckler Best Downtown Performance Artist of 2013.

The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters (Spanish: El sueño de la razón produce monstruos) c. 1799 by Francisco Goya

Keckler will be releasing two more versions of this song, in two different genres, by the end of the year. One will be a chamber pop ballad—same chords, different lyrics—and the other will be a German goth remix made by a real-life German goth.

Goth Lied features Lisa Kaplan as the boss and includes cameos by Gerry Visco, Gabe Fuller, Jess Ferguson, and Shepherd Laughlin.

Read more about Joseph Keckler and find dates for upcoming performances here.

28 Oct 18:49

hihihiroshi: i couldn’t do it



hihihiroshi:

i couldn’t do it

28 Oct 17:52

contingent-dreams: lunar-raspberry: "And what do we say to...



contingent-dreams:

lunar-raspberry:

"And what do we say to death?"

"Not today."

"The fuck out my face"

28 Oct 17:28

Call me

28 Oct 14:27

Up all night

28 Oct 13:49

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27 Oct 22:40

pangeachasmata: unexplained-events: Cat Cougar breaks into...











pangeachasmata:

unexplained-events:

Cat

Cougar breaks into man’s house and….destroys his blinds.

all cats is the same

27 Oct 22:37

"I Won't Let You Down" by OK Go

by Miss Cellania
Mattalyst

I wish their music was anywhere near as good as their videos.

(YouTube link)

Get ready for an amazing music video. OK Go released the video for their new song today: “I Won’t Let You Down.” The innovative video features kaleidoscopic Busby Berkeley-style dance formations in what appears to be one continuous take, although I can’t picture how they did it. The credits list one cameraman, Makoto Okuguchi, plus a “Multi-Copter Pilot,” Kenji Yasuda. The band members are each riding a UNI-CUB personal mobility device, previously featured on Neatorama. I am looking forward to the “making of” video. -via Viral Viral Videos

Update: According to OK Go singer Damian Kulash, the video was recorded at half-speed, and this is the camera setup.

Andy is the brains behind this operation. @arossexperience

Damian Kulash(@damiankulash)張貼的相片 於 8月 8, 2014 at 8:35下午 PDT

27 Oct 20:37

Verizon attaches privacy-obviating unique ID to customers' internet requests

by Rob Beschizza
Mattalyst

Even for Verizon, that's particularly diabolical. Wow.

Wired: "A trump card to obviate established privacy tools such as private browsing sessions or “do not track” features."