TechRev_AL writes "A team from the University of Washington has attached an RFID chip capable of sensing neural activity to a live moth, to pick up the spikes that occur as it beats its wings. Most neural implants are still relatively bulky, but the... ...full story at slashdot
from slashdot on Fri, Nov 06 2009
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| 23 Oct 09 |
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Neural Implant to Give Control of Paralyzed Arms » slashdot An anonymous reader writes "A neural implant that connects to muscle-stimulating electrodes has given monkeys the ability to grasp a ball and drop it into a hole even though the monkey's arm has been anesthetized. The approach is another step towards... |
| 09 Sep 07 |
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RFID implants linked to cancer in lab tests (Ryan Block/Engadget) » techmeme RFID implants linked to cancer in lab tests — As if pain, conspiracy, big brother, and lack of necessity weren't already enough to deter you, the average Joe or Jane, from getting a subcutaneous RFID chip implant, a number of studies... |
| 12 Oct 09 |
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Image Recognition Neural Networks, Open Sourced » slashdot sevarac writes "The latest release of Java Neural Network Framework Neuroph v2.3 comes with ready-to-use image recognition support. It provides GUI tool for training multi layer perceptrons for image recognition, and easy to use API to deploy these neural... |
| 10 Sep 07 |
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RFID chip implants linked to cancer in animals » the register (uk) Not fit for dogs? You might not want to chip granny afterall. Studies on animals discovered high incidents of tumours close to the sites of RFID chip implants.… |
| 24 Oct 08 |
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Researchers Find Problems With RFID Passport Cards » slashdot An anonymous reader writes "Researchers at the University of Washington have found that RFID tags used in two new types of border-crossing documents in the U.S. are vulnerable to snooping and copying. The information in these tags could be copied on to... |