The rat is suspended from a small lightweight neuro-robotic platform, as IEEE Spectrum reports. The goal is to make the vehicle and the rat work together to move forward. Brain-control interfaces like this could be a boon for people with locked-in syndrome or various other disabilities.
The system also includes several models and algorithms that explain the correlation between recorded neural signals and the rats movement, as Fukayama explains.
Researchers trained the rats by making them tow the car, motors turned off, around an enclosed area. A camera tracked the rats movement and fed data into a modeling program, which pieced together signals from the motor cortex. Then, the rats were hung from the car so their limbs barely touched the floor. The researchers switched the motors on, and as they tried to move, their neural signals were used to drive the car. Six out of eight rats adapted well and were able to get around with the car, according to IEEE Spectrum.
Its not clear how much the rats wriggling might have affected the cars movement, however. Fukayama and colleagues Takafumi Suzuki and Kunihiko Mabuchi want to perform more experiments to address that question.
They have been working on RatCar for several years and presented their most recent work last month at the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society annual conference in Buenos Aires.
[IEEE Spectrum ]
I, for one, welcome our cyberrat overlords.
That’s nothing compared to the Rat Prompter. It’s powered by an imbecile president’s “uh” words.