/ Experts
Tying Shoelaces with Artificial Hands
How  can we establish a connection with a completely immobilized person? Why  do we need brains and is it possible to create a prosthesis for the  mind? These questions are answered by Alexander Alekseevich Frolov,  Prof., DSc, PhD, Chief of the Mathematical Neurobiology of Learning Lab at the Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology of RAS. 
2045: Shortly  before the New Year, Raymond Kurzweil, a famous futurologist and  inventor, predicted that over the next twenty years people will be able  to get completely artificial bodies. You work with “brain-computer”  interfaces. Do you think there are solid reasons in your field of  science to support this forecast?
Alexander Alekseevich Frolov:  I think the question is invalid. Perhaps “to get” should be replaced by  “to have”. “To get” can be understood like a statement that a human is  something external to its own body and that a human can get a natural  body as well as an artificial body. In fact a human is its  body. And the question is whether a human can have an artificial body.  And whether someone that has an artificial body can be called a human  being. 
I  think the majority of people would agree that preservation of the  personality is connected with the preservation of memory and, thus, with  the preservation of identity. If the information will not be lost while  replacing the natural memory device with an artificial one, the person  apparently can be considered a human. And the same person as before the  operation. 
2045: Is it possible to conduct such an operation on a man in the near future, for example, in the next 20 years? 
A.A.F.:  I can offer no time estimates, but I see nothing that could  fundamentally limit the possibility of such an operation. Already,  surgeries are carried out that allow for an implant of artificial  sensory organs in order to restore sight or hearing. Work is being done  by Professor Berger’s lab at the University of Southern California to  develop a prosthetic hippocampus. The hippocampus is unquestionably a  center of memory, albeit short-term memory. The range of human organs  that are open to prosthetics is constantly increasing, and even includes  certain areas of the brain. The problem of creating artificial memory  devices capable of storing the contents of the natural memory of a given  individual is, understandably, complex but by no means unsolvable.  There are a number of reasonably realistic approaches that could provide  fruitful starting points for this line of research.
2045: Could you please explain what the term ‘“brain-computer” interface’ (BCI) means?
A.A.F.:  BCI is a direct communication between a brain and a technical device.  When any intention appears in the brain it generates a corresponding  signal. A BCI is able to classify these signals and recognize the class  of the signal according to the intention involved. Recognizing the class  of the signal is equivalent to recognizing the intention. The intention  is transferred directly to the device. 
2045: Which achievements of the BCI would you call the most significant? 
A.A.F.:  The research of the BCI has already overcame the stage where it had to  prove its importance on the laboratory scale. Now research into wider  applications is needed. 
2045: Has BCI found a practical application yet?
A.A.F.:  An invasive form of BCI contains an electrode array which is implanted  in the head, usually on the top of the cortex. They register a single  neuron’s signals of activity at a resolution high enough to recognise  the intentions of the brain. But this requires brain surgery. Therefore  the invasive BCI can be used only on the completely paralyzed, for whom  the BCI serves as the only means to convey their intents. Dozens of  operations of this kind have already been done, and they showed their  effectiveness. Meanwhile, further experiments aimed at improving BCI are  underway, mostly using monkeys. 
Non-invasive  BCI uses the signals collected from the surface of the skull (the type  of electrical activity recorded by an encephalogram is registered), or  even at a distance of a skull (the type of electrical activity recorded  by a magnetoencephalogram is registered). The source of the signals is  the electrical activity in the brain. EEG are the most likely to see  widespread applications; they are already used in the computer games  industry as well as in clinical practice. Special ‘caps’, which do not  require special settings, are used. These caps will soon become common  household appliances like a TV or a PC. The skill of conveying one’s  intentions to an external device by brain’s signals may itself be a  thrilling game. 
As for the non-invasive BCI’s clinical applications, the research is related to motor recovery in post-stroke patients. 
2045: Returning  to the question of an artificial human body, when do you think the BCI  technology will become developed enough to perform the task of  controlling such a complex thing? 
A.A.F.:  I have already mentioned motor recovery in post-stroke patients, which I  think will open up wider applications of the technology. You know,  creation of an artificial hand is by no means a simpler task then the  task of controlling it via BCI. The point is that control of modern  robots and robotic limbs is based on totally different principles than  control of living bodies. That’s why those patients who moved their  hands with the help of these manipulators considered them unfriendly and  refused to use them. They felt unusual stiffness in the joints. The  prosthetics are set to overly large coefficients of feedback, which  eliminates deviations from the desired trajectory by placing additional  resistance on the joints. 
A  human hand’s feedback network coefficients are smaller by orders of  magnitude, which makes its movements slow and smooth. So, good  mechanical models of organs and appendages are yet to be created. Next,  the organs need to be sensitized, ie, given external and internal  receptors similar to mechanoreceptors and proprioreceptors in a human  hand, which will report about one’s hand and fingers position. The  information these receptors provide may be converted into auditory  signals, for example. The high learning capacity of the brain gives  grounds for hope that after prolonged training these signals will be  perceived as signals of the movement by the brain. 
This  process is called learning for sensorimotor coordination. Sensorimotor  coordination is the basis of animal and human behavior. I expect a human  to perform compound motions (to tie shoelaces, for example) with two  hands: an artificial one and a real one. When one artificial hand is  integrated, a second one may be added, etc. It will significantly expand  the motor repertoire which may be handy for some kinds of occupations. 
2045: What  are the main obstacles? (I do not mean a complete transplantation of  the brain into an artificial body, but at least remote control of the  body).
A.A.F.:  I don’t see any fundamental constraints on the solution to the problem,  except that the problem is rather complicated and requires good  collaboration of specialists in different disciplines. 
2045: As  we know, the brain controls many bodily activities, so what would  happen to it if we ‘connected’ it to an artificial body? How complex  should an artificial body be so the brain doesn’t notice the  replacement?
A.A.F.:The  question is not whether a brain-controlled device could be too simple,  the question is that it shouldn’t be too complex. The problem here is  not the lack of resources of the brain, but the lack of ways for a BCI  device to understand and classify its intentions.
Now  brain-computer interfaces are able to control only quite primitive  devices, which have not many degrees of freedom. An artificial arm, for  example, is controlled by commands such as, “Grab”, “Release”, “Clench  the fist”, “Unclench the fist”, etc. But the movement has been  programmed in advance, and when a manipulator receives a command,  “Grab”, it moves along a predetermined trajectory and his fingers grab  an object located in a predetermined place. “Bring to the mouth” command  makes the prosthetic bring a glass to the point in space where the  mouth is supposed to be, and the patient must bring his mouth to this  location.
How  many various human intentions can be recognized by an BCI and how many  degrees of freedom can be controlled by one - it is a significant  question which is now being solved by BCI researchers.
2045: Is an artificial body something internal or external to the brain?
A.A.F.:  A brain is an organ aimed at meeting the needs of the body. These needs  are not limited to renewing the resources of the body, they also  include such needs as the need for social approval and the need for a  place in a social group, etc. A brain regulates current needs and  prioritizes the most important ones. It serves its body, therefore, if a  body an a brain are separated in space, a brain will continue  functioning only if he perceives the body as belonging to him.
2045: There  are many processes in our body we rarely pay attention to: breathing,  pulse, digestion, temperature regulation. Will a human be able to  operate all these processes manually? 
A.A.F.:  Indeed, a human cannot consciously control individual muscles. He  consciously sets a goal of motion, and subconsciously transfers this  goal into muscle activity. However, during biofeedback experiments a  goal of controlling a single muscle, or even a single neuron, was  achieved. But he cannot realize what processes were happening in the  brain. He learns from his mistakes by consulting the bio-feedback  device, and eventually learns to reproduce the very brain activity which  leads to activating the single muscle or the single neuron without  knowing the precise nature of this activity.
In  the case of brain-computer interface, bio-feedback is involved, too.  Practicing to control a BCI, a man learns to suppress noises not related  to the interface, while the activity related to the problem becomes  more stable. Thus controlling external devices is similar to controlling  one's own body in a way that no “manual” control of different degrees  of freedom is needed.
2045: Human-computer  interface is such an admirable idea! Is it possible to establish a  communication between different people via this kind of technology?
A.A.F.:  I don't see any problems with that. One man would show his intention on  a computer screen via his BCI, an other would give him response via his  BCI. It is possible to develop a device which would code an intention  into not only a visual signal, but into an audio or tactile one.  Eventually the intention will be coded into a signal which goes directly  to the brain, making a man feel tingling or see auras, I suppose. The  problem here is purely technical.
2045: Speaking  of thought-controlled bionic prosthesis, can this prosthesis differ  from a man’s hand? What difficulties are there in controlling this hand,  or controlling a whole body consisting of such nonstandard items? 
A.A.F.:  There are no fundamental difficulties in assimilating additional hands  and legs. The experience of using different tools speaks in favor of  this. A skilled worker perceives his tool as a part of his body; there  is no principal difference between using tools and using one’s own body. 
But  all the sensory organs should be located in the same body. Sensorimotor  coordination means that the brain coordinates all the information from  various sensory systems, and that’s why we perceive the world as being  external and stable, not as a chaotic series of changes in receptor  stimulation. 
2045: If memory and consciousness are no more than products of the brain, is  it possible to replace them too? Is it feasible to reconstruct  consciousness into any external carrier? I mean total reconstruction,  preserving the identity to fine details, like, say, political views?
A.A.F.:  Consciousness, memory, and thinking are processes. They may be  reconstructed, but it is incorrect to discuss any prosthetic appliances  for them. As these processes serve a body, they may be reproduced only  by the brain which does have a body. Either the brain, or the body may  be artificial, though. I think rewriting one’s memory to an external  device, like a computer disc, is not possible because of the very large  differences in their organisation. But I imagine writing memory to a  neural prosthesis that imitates the structure and the functions of a  real neuronal network and is put into a brain to replace a damaged part.  After integrating with the undamaged parts the prosthesis gets involved  in a distributed memory system. Then a second prosthesis is put into  the brain, etc. In this case, sequential addition of new prosthesis  would occur naturally in a similar way as undamaged parts of the brain  assume the functions damaged ones can no longer perform. It seems to me,  that with this kind of memory transfer one’s memory and  self-identification will be fully preserved. 
2045: So, there are no insurmountable obstacles for creating a remotely  controlled body at first, and then for life expectancy to increase  several times by using a “living brain - artificial body” combination.  It‘s overwhelming. Could you please tell us the scale of the social,  financial and scientific requirements of realizing the project? 
A.A.F.:  I think, the scale and multidisciplinary approach of the project can be  compared to those of space flight and nuclear power. By the way, I’ve  recently read that China was planning to build a National Brain Research  and Modeling Agency, similar to the American NASA.
2045: We’ve seen successive generations of high-tech cell phones replace each  other with breakneck speed, while their capabilities dramatically  increase. Does something similar happen in the field of neural  interfaces?
A.A.F.:  I expect wide implementation of this technology in the game industry,  and in recovery for stroke patients, in the very near future. If it  happens, incentives for further development of BCI will appear. 
2045: Do people really need artificial bodies when sometimes it is hard to feed the natural ones?
A.A.F.:  BCI research doesn’t intersect with this problem in any way. Moreover,  the creation of an understandable and controllable project at the state  level will help to improve the overall Research and Development level in  the country, as happened during the nuclear and spacer projects. As I  said before, the social utility of BCI research is related to its  clinical usage, while commercial interest is related to the game  industry. A stroke or even more serious disease may happen to anyone, so  we should be interested in creating the treatments. Furthermore, we are  all mortal, and most of us would not mind extending our lifespans. If  the project we are talking about will contribute to that, it is of high  importance, despite the probable ethical issues. I think none of the  existing life extension projects are free from risk.
/
International Manifesto of the "2045" Strategic Social Initiative
Mankind has turned into a consumer society standing at the edge of a total loss of the conceptual guidelines necessary for further evolution. The majority of people are almost exclusively absorbed  in merely maintaining their own comfortable lives.
Modern civilization, with its space stations, nuclear submarines, iPhones and Segways cannot save mankind from the limitations in the physical abilities of our bodies, nor from diseases and death.
We are not satisfied with modern achievements of scientific and technical progress. Science working for the satisfaction of consumer needs will not be able to ensure a technological breakthrough towards a radically different way of life.
We believe that the world needs a different ideological paradigm. Within its framework it is necessary to form a major objective  capable of pointing out a new direction for the development of all mankind and ensuring the achievement of a scientific and technical revolution.
The new ideology should assert, as one of its priorities, the necessity of using breakthrough technology for an improvement of man himself and not only of his environment.
We believe that it is possible and necessary to eliminate aging and even death, and to overcome the fundamental limits of the physical and mental capabilities currently set by the restrictions of the physical body.
Scientists from various countries in the world are already developing technology that ensures the creation of an artificial human body prototype within the next decade. We believe the biggest technological project of our times will become the creation of such artificial human body and a subsequent transfer of individual human consciousness to such a body.
Implementation of this technological project will inevitably result in an explosive development of innovations and global changes in our civilization  and will improve human life.
We believe that before 2045 an artificial body will be created that will not only surpass the existing body in terms of functionality, but will achieve perfection of form and be no less attractive than the human body. People will make independent decisions about the extension of their lives and the possibilities for personal development in a new body after the resources of the biological body have been exhausted.
The new human being will receive a huge range of abilities and will be capable of withstanding extreme external conditions easily: high temperatures, pressure, radiation, lack of oxygen, etc. Using a neural-interface humans will be able to operate several bodies of various forms and sizes remotely.
We suggest the implementation of not just a mechanistic project to create an artificial body, but a whole system of views, values and technology which will render assistance to humankind in intellectual, moral, physical, mental and spiritual development.
We invite all interested specialists: scientists, politicians, mass media personalities, philosophers, futurologists and businessmen to join the "2045" strategic social initiative. We welcome all who share our vision of the future and are ready to make the next jump.
The main objectives of our movement are:
1. To achieve the support of the International community and create conditions for international co-operation of interested specialists around the "2045" Initiative.  
2. To create an international research center for cybernetic immortality to advance practical implementations of the main technical project – the creation of the artificial body and the preparation for subsequent transfer of individual human consciousness to such a body. 
 
3. To engage experts in the selection and support of the most interesting projects in the quest to ensure technological breakthroughs.
4. To support innovative industries and create special scientific education programs for schools and institutes of higher education.
5. To create educational programs for television, radio and internet, to hold forums, conferences, congresses and exhibitions, and to establish awards and produce books, movies and computer games with the view of raising the profile of the initiative and spreading its ideas.
6. To form a culture connected with the ideology of the future, promoting technical progress, artificial intellect, “multi-body”, immortality, and cyborgization.
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