The U.S. military is working on computers than can scan your mind and adapt to what you’re thinking.
Since 2000, Darpa, the Pentagon’s blue-sky research arm, has spearheaded a far-flung, nearly $70 million effort to build prototype cockpits, missile control stations and infantry trainers that can sense what’s occupying their operators’ attention, and adjust how they present information, accordingly. Similar technologies are being employed to help intelligence analysts find targets easier by tapping their unconscious reactions. It’s all part of a broader Darpa effort to radically boost the performance of American troops.
“Computers today, you have to learn how they work,” says Navy Commander Dylan Schmorrow, who served as Darpa’s first program manager for this Augmented Cognition project. He now works for the Office of Naval Research. “We want the computer to learn you, adapt to you.”
So much of what’s done today in the military involves staring at a computer screen — parsing an intelligence report, keeping track of fellow soldiers, flying a drone airplane — that it can quickly lead to information overload. Schmorrow and other Augmented Cognition (AugCog) researchers think they can overcome this, though.
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It’ll get real scary when they start implanting fine wires into the brain in order to fly airplanes or fire a rifle.
I, for one, welcome our Skynet overlord!
This allows pilots to interact with flying bots. Imagine a swarm of flying M16s. All controlled by one person. These bots would literally share a brain. Almost impossible to completely destroy and you would never lose a pilot.
This project sounds a bit, but just a bit more realistic that the psychic soldiers the CIA and the KGB were trying to develop during the cold war.
Didn’t Clint Eastwood make a movie about that sort of technology long before 2000? “Foxfire” or something like that. Not such a new idea.
Now you guys will be able to lose even costlier wars.
#6 – That’s a very good point 🙂
What good is a mind-powered military with an idiot as commander-in-chief?
Didn’t Clint Eastwood make a movie about that sort of technology long before 2000? “Foxfire” or something like that.
Actually, it was FireFox (now, WHERE ELSE have I heard that name? :))
Based on a pretty good book.
J/P=?
Hmmm, reminds me of this nice study that had Mouse Brain Cellsin a dish flying a flight simulator: http://www.napa.ufl.edu/2004news/braindish.htm