Scientists Build Microscope Onto The Head Of A Rat
mindpixel writes: "Unisci is reporting: 'The ability to see individual neurons in detail in the brains of conscious, behaving animals seems like the stuff of science fiction. But in the current issue of Neuron, Professor Winfried Denk and colleagues report that they have done just that. In a stunning technical achievement, they have built a tiny, powerful microscope onto the head of a rat.'" This might be technically stunning, but I wonder how much the rat likes it.
I think I see something, SQUEEK, darn stop moving.
You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
I wonder what kind of use the data gathered from this experiment will have for computer scientists studying neural networks. By studying mechanisms of connection formation in the real thing, maybe we could improve the performance of computer neural networks. Of course, the opposite should hold as well, where we could better model the living brain in computers. Unfortunately, I would guess that the optical camera can't pick up on patterns of electrical activity, so we wouldn't gain insight into firing patterns as the network operates. IANA computer scientist, though; does anyone know how practical this would be?
this is a disgusting use of science. I honestly feel it furthers science relatively little to do this. personally i think the good doctor who put the microscope in the rats head should have put a microscope on his own ego-laden head. I don't want sound too preachy, but what right does the researchers involved have to do this to even the lowly rat.
i am disgusted to be in the same genus as the people who worked on this project.
Beer Die is the game of champions Learning To walk my own path.
There is an interesting article here that describes recent work in analysing electrical patterns in the brains of people to determine what they are looking at. Success rates were very good, at least in being able to tell what type of object the subjects were looking at.
-- We don't understand software, and sometimes we don't understand hardware, but we can *see* the blinking lights
If that's the way you feel then why don't you have the microscope implanted into your head... Don't like that do you? Neither does the rat.
Rats may not have the lavish and lengthy life that we do, but they're still entitled to live their lives the way rats do, without amoral "scientists" vivisecting them.
Besides, a rat brain is a damn sight different to a human one, and frankly unless you apply this technique to a human brain, then this "research" will lead down some potentially dangerous dark alleys, and life will have been destroyed in a useless experiment.
"We kill to cure, with cures that kill" - Skinny Puppy
I am very well studied in this sort of thing, and simply put, anyone who still thinks that humankind can benefit from animal experimentation should read this site thoroughly, stick a crowbar up their ass and open up their mind. I recommend it as a site which discusses only the scientific standpoint, leaving the ethic aside (although the ethic should be enough of a reason to abolish vivisection).
What will they learn from this? Better brain surgery techniques for rats. Not humans, rats.
Do they have a right? Only if you think that "lesser" creatures only have as much right to life as it's usefulness to you. And if you think that way, then start rounding up handicapped people for the vivisection labs.
"We kill to cure, with cures that kill" - Skinny Puppy
I wonder what types of Eggplants those neural networks comprise!
telescopes, microscopes, night vision, and infa-red! that'd be so cool....
Oh, I'd like a wireless interface for it, or firewire, so I can walk around with my laptop, recording what I see.
I mean come on, have you been vaccinated? would you take antibiotics for the disease a rat gave you? Doctors practice surgery on animals... unless you are a christian scientist i dont wanna hear any bitching.
I live in the city and rats are not friendly loving animals. I've seen rats bigger than cats and even heard a story that a rat ate an infant.
whatever, this rat was bred for scientific research anyways.
Why should this be so exciting!
They can hardly see much because it will only give an image of the surface of the brain. And also, only one little part of the surface will be visible. A brain is 3D not 2D, hope that they know that.
Why cant they just use Magnetic Resonance Imaging instead, then they doesnt even have to put stuff in the poor little rats head. Using nuclear magnetic resonance seems to me to be the only way to se things in 3D because you can scan out "slices" and put them together and so to speak get a 3D-picture of the stuff in the brain.
That would be much more easy and also more ethical.
2 reptiles beneath your current threshold.
Man.
As much as this may be a good thing for the human race...
Why cant they just use Magnetic Resonance Imaging instead, then they doesnt even have to put stuff in the poor little rats head. Using nuclear magnetic resonance seems to me to be the only way to se things in 3D because you can scan out "slices" and put them together and so to speak get a 3D-picture of the stuff in the brain.
Actually, PET (Positron Emission Tomography) and CAT (Computed Axial Tomography [via x-ray absorption scanning]) and even old-fashioned ultrasound give you 3D pictures too.
None of these are anywhere close to the resolution you'd get looking through a microscope. Great for finding tumours or looking at large-scale brain activity, and useless for looking at function on the level of individual neurons.
Even if you're looking only at surface neurons, watching neurons while they're operating in a brain will teach you one heck of a lot (especially if you hook a spectrophotometer up to the microscope and get chemical composition readouts - neurochemistry is only partly understood).
"...a two-assed monkey!"
We could look and say, "Oh, it moved its leg, hmm......went from this neuron to this one........then to here...." things like that. And as far as i can imagine, thats the real mystery. But hey, everything is a step. This proves that we can make things that small, and that the animal rights people dont yell about this....yet. Shall wait and see....could be intersting.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&o
http://webcam.ratbrain.com/
... Wait, Pinky. According to my neuron activity monitor, you're not thinking anything at all."
Hmm, how long is it going to be before we have the RatCam?
I bet PETA just loves this :-)
All I want is some sharks with lasers implanted in their heads; is that too much to ask??
-- Dr. Evil
Accountability on the heads of the powerful.
Power in the hands of the accountable.
... a single human