• Hegar@fedia.io
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    4 months ago

    nothing gets out of your brain on its own, except heat.

    I heard a recording of a song made by reading a brain that was thinking that song. It was far from perfect, but you could tell which song it was. I’m no neuroscientist, but if that information can already be plucked from a brain, surely that’s proof that reconstructing thoughts is possible to some degree?

    https://www.sciencenews.org/article/neuroscientist-pink-floyd-music-brain-activity

    • TurboHarbinger
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      4 months ago

      Nice article, but it’s more like reading stimulus reaction while reconstructing it in a form that’s similar to the original. But it has flaws. Based on the recordings you can make out pretty much any existant song (or memorized recording) but not original thoughts. Everyone can remember the beats of a song, but also everyone makes word associations in different ways, depending on which concepts sticks.

      Very cool for an interface tho. It would be possible to use it as base for composers, if it’s possible to interpret original hummings, or beats (what would I know, I’m not a musician), which would require training.

      But there is a catch

      Continuing to probe musical perception is likely to be difficult because the brain areas that process it are hard to access without invasive methods.

      nothing gets out on its own