| For the first time, researchers have used fMRI to allow someone to embody a robot hundreds of kilometres away using thought alone. The ultimate goal of the Virtual Embodiment and Robotic Re-embodiment project is to create a surrogate, like in Avatar. |
"The ultimate goal is to create a surrogate, like in Avatar, although that’s a long way off yet,” says Abderrahmane Kheddar, director of the joint robotics laboratory at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology in Tsukuba, Japan.
Teleprescence robots and teleoperated robots, have been around for decades however Kheddar and his team are taking the technology to the next level. “True embodiment goes far beyond classical telepresence, by making you feel that the thing you are embodying is part of you,” says Kheddar. “This is the feeling we want to reach.”
To accomplish this breakthrough, researchers with the international Virtual Embodiment and Robotic Re-embodiment project used fMRI to scan the brain of university student Tirosh Shapira as he imagined moving different parts of his body. He attempted to direct a virtual avatar by thinking of moving his left or right hand or his legs.
The scanner works by measuring changes in blood flow to the brain’s primary motor cortex, and using this the team was able to create an algorithm that could distinguish between each thought of movement. The commands were then sent via an internet connection to a small robot at the Béziers Technology Institute in France.
The test situation let Shapira control the robot in near real time with his thoughts, while a camera on the robot’s head allowed him to see from the robot’s perspective. When he thought of moving his left or right hand, the robot moved 30 degrees to the left or right. Imagining moving his legs made the robot walk forward.
To test the extent of his feelings of embodiment, the researchers also surprised him with a mirror. “I really felt like I was there,” Shapira says. “At one point the connection failed. One of the researchers picked the robot up to see what the problem was and I was like, ‘Oi, put me down!’”
The researchers are also fine-tuning their algorithm to look for patterns of brain activity, rather than simply areas that are active. This will allow each thought process to control a greater range of movements. “For example, you could think of moving your fingers at different speeds and we could correspond that with different speeds of walking or turning,” says Cohen, who presented the results of the embodiment trials at BioRob 2012 in Rome, Italy, last week.
So far, only healthy people have embodied the surrogate. Next, the researchers hope to collaborate with groups such as Adrian Owen’s at the University of Western Ontario in Canada to test their surrogate on people who are paralyzed or locked in.
“I think it is very impressive and in the broadest sense reflects where it is that we are trying to get to in enabling communication in patients who are deemed to be locked in or even vegetative,” says Owen. He cautions, though, that there is a long way to go before the technology is able to provide long-term help for patients.
Electroencephalogram (EEG) technology, which uses electrodes attached to the scalp to record electrical activity in the brain, is likely to prove more practical than fMRI, he says, since it is cheaper and more comfortable to use for extended periods of time. Although EEG has been used to control robots, the readings are not yet as clear as those from fMRI. Nevertheless, this demonstration is “an interesting glimpse of what might be possible in the future,” Owen says.
SOURCE New Scientist
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