Could Intel Hardwire Your Brain for Google?

Last week, Roger Dooley had an interesting post on his Neuromarketing Blog (great blog, by the way) about Intel's efforts to implant a computer chip directly into our brains, essentially allowing us to interface directly with computers. Roger ponders whether this will, in fact, become a wired "buy button". I wonder, instead, if this is the ultimate Google search appliance? The idea was floated, somewhat facetiously, by Eric Schmidt, in an interview with Michael Arrington on Tech Crunch this year:

Now, Sergey argues that the correct thing to do is to just connect it straight to your brain. In other words, you know, wire it into your head. And so we joke about this and said, we have not quite figured out what that problem looks like…But that would solve the problem. In other words, if we just – if you had the thought and we knew what you meant, we could run it and we could run it in parallel.

The Singularity and Hardwired Brains

Okay, this crosses all kinds of boundaries of "creepy", but if we stop to seriously consider this, it's not as outlandish as it seems. Ray Kurzweil has been predicting just this for over two decades now..the merging of computing power and human thought, an event he calls the Singularity. Kurzweil even set the date: 2045 (by the way, the target date for the Intel implant is 2020, giving us 25 years to "get it right" after the first implant). Kurzweil's predictions seem somehow apocalyptic, or, at the least, scary, but his logic is compelling. Computers can, even today, do some types of mental tasks far faster and more efficiently than the human brain. The brain excels at computations that tie into the intuition and experience of our lives - the softer, less rational types of mental activity. It the brain was simply a huge data cruncher, computers would already be kicking our butts. But there are leaps of insight and intuition that we regularly take as humans that have never been replicated in a digital circuit yet. Kurzweil predicts that, with the exponential increase of computing power, it will only be a matter of time until computers match and exceed the capabilities of human intuition.

Google's Brain Wave

But Intel's efforts bring up another possibility, the one posited by Google's Sergey Brin - what if a chip can connect our human needs, intuitions and hunches with the data and processing power available through the grid of the Internet? What if we don't have to go through the messy and wasteful effort of formulating all those neuronal flashes into language that then can be typed into a query box because there's a direct pipeline that takes our thoughts and ports them directly to Google? What if the universe of data was "always on", plugged directly into our brains? Now, that's a fascinating, if somewhat scary, concept to contemplate.

Let's explore this a little further. John Battelle, in a series of posts some time ago, asked why conversations were so much more helpful than web searching.  Battelle said that it's because conversations are simply a much bigger communication pipeline and that's essential if we're talking about complex decisions.

What is it about a conversation? Why can we, in 30 minutes or less, boil down what otherwise might be a multi-day quest into an answer that addresses nearly all our concerns? And what might that process teach us about what the Web lacks today and might bring us tomorrow?

Well the answer is at once simple and maddeningly complex. Our ability to communicate using language is the result of millions of years of physical and cultural evolution, capped off by 15-25 years of personal childhood and early adult experience. But it comes so naturally, we forget how extraordinary this simple act really is.

Talking (or Better Yet - Thinking) to a Search Engine

As Battelle said, conversations are a deceptively rich communication medium. And it's because they evolve on both sides to allow the conversant to quickly veer and refine the dialogue to keep up with our own mental processes. Conversations come closer to keeping up with our brains. And, if those conversations are held face-to-face, not only do we have our highly evolved language abilities, we also have the full power of body language. Harvard professors Nitin Nohria and Robert Eccles said in their book Networks and Organizations: Structure, Form and Action:

In contrast to interactions that are largely sequential, face-to-face interaction makes it possible for two people to be sending nod delivering messages simultaneously. The cycle of interruption, feed-back and repair possible in face-to-face interaction is so quick that it is virtually instantaneous. As (sociologist Erving) Goffman notes, "a speaker can see how others are responding to her message even before it is done and alter it midstream to elicit a different response'."

The idea of a conversation as a digital assistance medium is interesting. It allows us to shape our queries and speak more intuitively and less literally. It allows us to interface and communicate the way we were intended to. In his post, Battelle despaired of an engine ever being this smart and suggested instead that the engine act as a matchmaker with a knowledgeable human on the other site, the Wikia/Mahalo approach. I can't see this as a viable solution, because it lacks the scale necessary.

This is not about finding one piece of information, like a phone number or an address, but helping us through buying a house or a car. Search still fall far short here, something I touched on in my last Just Behave column on Search Engine Land. In those situations, we need more than a tool that relies on us feeding it a few words at a time and then doing its best to guess what we need. We need something similar to a conversation, in a form that can instantly scale to meet demand. Google, for all it's limitations in a complex scenario, still has build the expectation of getting information just in time. And the bottle neck in these complex situations is the language interface and the communication process. Even if we're talking to another person, with all the richness of communication that brings, we still have to transfer the ideas that sit in our head to their head.

So, back to Intel's brain chip. What if our thoughts, in their entirety, could instantly be communicated to Google, or Bing, or what ever flavor of search assistant you want to imagine? What if refining all the  information that was presented was a split second closing of a synapse, rather than a laborious application of filters that sit on the interface?  Faster and far more efficiently than talking to another human, we could quickly sift through all the information and functionality available to mankind to tailor it specifically to what we needed at that time. That starts to boggle the imagination. But, is it feasible?

I believe so. Look again at the brain activity charts generated by the UCLA - Irvine research team that tracked people using a Google like web search interface, particularly the image in the lower right.



Let's dig a little deeper into what is actually happening in the brain when we Google something. The image below is from the Internet Savvy group in the UC study (sorry about the fuzziness).



The front section of the brain (A) shows the engagement of the frontal lobes, indicating decision making and reasoning. This is where we render judgment and make decisions in a rational, conscious way. The section along the left side of the brain (B) is our language centers, where we translate thought to words and vice versa. The structures in the centre part of the brain, hidden beneath the cortex are the sub-cortical structures (C), the autopilot of the brain, including the basal ganglia, hippocampus and hypothalamus. I touched on how these structures dictate what much of our online activity looks like in a post last week. Finally, the area right at the back of the brain indicates activation of the visual cortex, used both to translate input from our eyes and also to visualize something "in our mind's eye".  As shown by the strong activation of the language center, much of the heavy lifting of our brains when we're Googling involves translation of thoughts to words.

Knowing that these are the parts of the brain activated, would it be possible to provide some neural short cuts? From example, what if you could take memories being drawn forward (activating both the hippocampus and the frontal lobes) and translate this directly into directives to retrieve information, without trying to translate into words? This "brain on Google" approach could be efficient at a degree several magnitudes greater than anything we can imagine currently.

By the way, this interface can work both ways. Not only could it feed our thoughts to the online grid. It can also take the results and information and receives and pipe it directly to the relevant parts of our brains. Images could be rendered instantly in our visual cortex, sounds in our audio cortex, facts and figures could pass directly to the prefrontal cortex. Call it the Matrix, call it virtual reality, call it what you want. The fact is, somewhere in an Intel research lab, they're already working on it!

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Print | posted @ Monday, November 30, 2009 11:35 AM

Comments on this entry:

 re: Could Intel Hardwire Your Brain for Google?
by AJ at 11/30/2009 9:45 PM

Larry Paige was talking about this back in 2004:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/03/03/google_founder_dreams_of_google/

Why would anyone [other than someone with something to sell] want something like this as an individual connection or a connection networked with other people?

It's just sick. There is already plenty of information overload and to much information for people to process and it comes in relatively limited chunks now. To have one stream that would provide everything a person could possibly consider in making a decision would seem to lead to an overload and a potential crash of the system. Not just a relatively harmless Windows style blue screen of death crash but a brain crash.

Life isn't just about efficiency, it's about taking the time to relax and smell the roses and enjoy the thrill of discovery. If one person got it and their mental capacity increased exponentially (even if it totally f'd up their normal brain activity and ability to live what we know as a human life), then prisoners dilemma would pull more people in to compete in the job market or for capital and we'd all be worse off because it would be the cost of entry to survive in the marketplace.

Think, not can we do it, but should we do it and what would the outcome be?
Gravatar # re: Could Intel Hardwire Your Brain for Google?
by Gord Hotchkiss at 12/1/2009 8:32 AM

Hmmm..a Windows system crash in your brain..good point! Would you want to trust your brain to Vista?
Gravatar # re: Could Intel Hardwire Your Brain for Google?
by Aaron Goldman at 12/2/2009 5:00 PM

"This is not about finding one piece of information, like a phone number or an address, but helping us through buying a house or a car. Search still fall far short here, something I touched on in my last Just Behave column on Search Engine Land. In those situations, we need more than a tool that relies on us feeding it a few words at a time and then doing its best to guess what we need. We need something similar to a conversation, in a form that can instantly scale to meet demand. Google, for all it's limitations in a complex scenario, still has build the expectation of getting information just in time. And the bottle neck in these complex situations is the language interface and the communication process. Even if we're talking to another person, with all the richness of communication that brings, we still have to transfer the ideas that sit in our head to their head."

I think Hunch.com (the iPhone of search) meets these criteria. It takes a step-by-step approach to walk you thru the decision-making process, steering you down the path to the right choice for you based on your pref's as well as the wisdom of the community.

I know you gave Hunch a quick look when it first launched but suggest you give it a more prolonged opp. to learn about you. Between that and the thousands of data points it's racked up on others similar to you, I think you'll find that it can help you solve big chunks of these "complex situations."
Gravatar # re: Could Intel Hardwire Your Brain for Google?
by Shane Thompson at 3/7/2010 1:57 PM

The whole thing is a possiblity in today's technology age. Microsoft has developed a new system called Microsoft Surface which can actually be run through Windows 7. Windows 7 is actually called the "Vista fix". I've tried it myself and I love it.
Anyway, Microsoft Surface is a table based system that will soon be in restaraunts and hotels.

I had wondered if you could actually hardwire a brain into a computer because basically all I know that brain does is send/receive messages and perform alot of decisions within a millisecond. According to the CIA Factbook, there are approximately 6744 deaths in the United States of America per day so getting the resources might not be impossible. Getting the clearance... Maybe.

Of course I am speaking out of idea. There would have to be extensive research and testing for years and years and alot of money invested into it. If I was able to do this then I would.

I know of a device that is available to those who are paralyzed from the neck down that can be implanted into their brain with the option to connect and disconnect from a special computer that you can interact with just by facial expresions/movements.

So all this about a chip into your brain is actually possible. I just wish it wasn't limited to a search engine.

Look into it.
Gravatar # re: Could Intel Hardwire Your Brain for Google?
by North Star Marketing Support at 10/12/2010 12:08 AM

They are talking about being able to turn on lights in your house & use any electical feature in your house through brainwaves....

Crazy! Although, look how far we've come in 30 years - internet, the tiniest mobile phones and even interactive social media (facebook, twitter etc).

Can't wait.

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