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anonimo 1 meses atrásPosted on I enjoy what you guys tend to be up too. This type of clever work and retonpirg! Keep up the wonderful works guys Ive incorporated you guys to my personal blogroll. denuncie o comentario
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anonimo 1 meses atrásPosted on I enjoy what you guys tend to be up too. This type of clever work and retonpirg! Keep up the wonderful works guys Ive incorporated you guys to my personal blogroll. denuncie o comentario
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anonimo 1 meses atrásPosted on I enjoy what you guys tend to be up too. This type of clever work and retonpirg! Keep up the wonderful works guys Ive incorporated you guys to my personal blogroll. denuncie o comentario
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anonimo 1 meses atrásFrom the sounds of it, I think theyre just sanyig that the retina converts the vision of the object into electrical signals, which they then studied. Im assuming the brain generates similar electrical signals during dreams, which can be examined and converted to an image in the same way the brain does.The last I had heard of something like this, scientists had figured out how to place *very* basic images from a camera into the brain, for people who had lost their sight. The illustrations of what the patient actually saw were little more than light or dark points throughout their field of vision. Basically just enough to avoid obstacles, but nowhere near enough to identify them, much less more complex activities such as reading or facial recognition.In light of that, Id be very skeptical of the image quality theyre able to get out of this system. At best, Im guessing its good enough to identify types of objects (distinguishing a car from a dumpster, for example), but I doubt it gets much better than that.Still, its certainly an interesting development, and Im parti#palavrão não!!!#larly interested to see how this could apply to work being done on memory as well. This type of device could prove incredibly valuable to law enforcement, where sketch artists have to go through a lot of effort to get even rough estimates of suspects faces. denuncie o comentario
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anonimo 1 meses atrásFrom the sounds of it, I think theyre just sanyig that the retina converts the vision of the object into electrical signals, which they then studied. Im assuming the brain generates similar electrical signals during dreams, which can be examined and converted to an image in the same way the brain does.The last I had heard of something like this, scientists had figured out how to place *very* basic images from a camera into the brain, for people who had lost their sight. The illustrations of what the patient actually saw were little more than light or dark points throughout their field of vision. Basically just enough to avoid obstacles, but nowhere near enough to identify them, much less more complex activities such as reading or facial recognition.In light of that, Id be very skeptical of the image quality theyre able to get out of this system. At best, Im guessing its good enough to identify types of objects (distinguishing a car from a dumpster, for example), but I doubt it gets much better than that.Still, its certainly an interesting development, and Im parti#palavrão não!!!#larly interested to see how this could apply to work being done on memory as well. This type of device could prove incredibly valuable to law enforcement, where sketch artists have to go through a lot of effort to get even rough estimates of suspects faces. denuncie o comentario






















