Imagine the best way to give dictation (without spelling mistakes) or to program without typing and that pesky carpal tunnel syndrome - by pure mind control alone.��������;��������д������ƴд���� �����Գ���û�д��ֺ�����������֢��Ⱥ-�ɵ����ľ�����ơ� Scientists at Brown University and Cyberkinetics Neurotechnology Systems (and others) have made this possible; as published last week in Nature .��ѧ���ڲ��ʴ�ѧ��cyberkinetics neurotechnologyϵͳ���������ˣ�������Ŀ���;���ܹ��������� �� The application of this technology boggles imagination.Ӧ�������boggles����������

Nagle, a 26-year-old quadriplegic, was hooked up to a computer via an implant smaller than an aspirin that sits on top of his brain and reads electrical patterns. nagle ������26�����̱֫���������ӵ������ϣ�ͨ��ֲ��С��1��˾ƥ��֮�ϵĶ�����Ĵ��ԣ�����ȡ����ģʽ�� Using that technology, he learned how to move a cursor around a screen, play simple games, control a robotic arm, and even - couch potatoes, prepare to gasp in awe - turn his brain into a TV remote control.ʹ�øü�������ѧ��������ƶ��������Ļ��Χ�����Ӽ򵥵���Ϸ�����ƻ�е�ۣ�����-ɳ��������׼������̾��η-����Ĵ��Գ�Ϊһ�����ӵ�Զ�̿��ơ� All while chatting amiably with the researchers.��������amiably���о��� He even learned how to perform these tasks in less time than the average PC owner spends installing Microsoft Windows.������ѧ�������ִ����Щ�����ڸ�̵�ʱ�䣬��ƽ���PCӵ�л���װMicrosoft Windows �� Imagine what Dr. Stephen Hawkins can do with it!���벩ʿ˹�ٷһ���˹������������

The technology can enable a hooked-up human to write at 15 words a minute - half as fast as the average person writes by hand.�ü�������ʹһ��-������Դд��15��һ����-һ��һ��죬һ����д�֡�

Personally I wouldn't mind having an implant along with a top of the line portable computer in my backpack.�Ҹ��˲��������һ��ֲ������һ���ߵı�Яʽ��������ҵı���

More Thought Reading Technology ����˼�룬������
Last year, Sony took out a patent on a game system that beams data directly into the mind without implants.ȥ�꣬�����ó���ר�����Ϸϵͳ����������ֱ�ӽ�����Ŀ��û��ֲ��� It uses a pulsed ultrasonic signal that induces sensory experiences such as smells, sounds and images.���������峬���źţ����յ��ĸй����飬����ζ��������ͼ��

Niels Birbaumer, a neuroscientist at the University of Tuebingen in Germany, has developed a device that enables disabled people to communicate by reading their brain waves through the skin; doesn't require implants.���˹birbaumer ����ѧ����ͼ�����ѧ���ڵ¹��ƶ���һ��װ�ã�ʹ������ʿ��ͨ��ͨ���Ķ����ǵ��Ե粨ͨ��Ƥ��;����Ҫֲ���

Stu Wolf, one of the top scientists at DARPA, looks ahead and predicts in not so distant future we would have network-enabled telepathy , instant thought transfer over internet.˹ͼ�����ˣ�����ĵ�����֮һ����ѧ����DARPA�ģ�չ���Ԥ�⣬��û����ôңԶ�Ľ��������ǽ������繦�ܵĸ�Ӧ ����ʱ��˼��ת�ó������� The question is how do we control which thoughts we want to transmit and which we don't.������������ο��Ƶ�˼������Ҫת����������û�С�
Link:���ӣ� CNN���ߵ���������

Imagine how simple dating would be, no assumptions, no reading book on Mars and Venus and no need for magical tips.����򵥵Ľ��ѻᣬû���κμ��裬û�ж����飬���Ǻͽ��Ǻ�û�б�ҪΪ������ؾ���
It will revolutionize all forms of communication as we know it.�����������Ե�һ����ʽ�Ĺ�ͨ����Ϊ����֪����һ�㡣