Chinese scientists create robot with brain made from human stem cells - Researchers have developed brain-on-chip technology to train the robot to perform tasks such as gripping objects



Chinese scientists create robot with brain made from human stem cells

Researchers have developed brain-on-chip technology to train the robot to perform tasks such as gripping objects

762faf5f7682f6bafba8063f912af0797c279703.png

Chinese scientists have developed a robot with a lab-grown artificial brain that can be taught to perform various tasks.

The brain-on-chip technology developed by researchers at Tianjin University and the Southern University of Science and Technology combines a brain organoid – a tissue derived from human stem cells – with a neural interface chip to power the robot and teach it to avoid obstacles and grip objects.

The technology is an emerging branch of brain-computer interfaces (BCI), which aims to combine the brain’s electrical signals with external computing power and which China has made a priority.

It is “the world’s first open-source brain-on-chip intelligent complex information interaction system” and could lead to the development of brain-like computing, according to Tianjin University.

“[This] is a technology that uses an in-vitro cultured ‘brain’ – such as brain organoids – coupled with an electrode chip to form a brain-on-chip,” which encodes and decodes stimulation feedback, Ming Dong, vice-president of Tianjin University, told state-owned Science and Technology Daily on Tuesday.

BCI technology has gained widespread attention due to the Elon Musk-backed Neuralink, an implantable interface designed to let patients control devices with only their thoughts.

Tianjin University now says its research could lead to the development of hybrid human-robot intelligence.

Brain organoids are made from human pluripotent stem cells typically only found in early embryos that can develop into different kinds of tissues, including neural tissues.

When grafted into the brain, they can establish functional connections with the host brain, the Tianjin University team wrote in an unedited manuscript published in the peer-reviewed Oxford University Press journal Brain last month.

“The transplant of human brain organoids into living brains is a novel method for advancing organoid development and function. Organoid grafts have a host-derived functional vasculature system and exhibit advanced maturation,” the team wrote.

Li Xiaohong, a professor at Tianjin University, told Science and Technology Daily that while brain organoids were regarded as the most promising model of basic intelligence, the technology still faced “bottlenecks such as low developmental maturity and insufficient nutrient supply”.

In the paper, the team said it had developed a technique to use low-intensity ultrasound, which could help organoids better integrate and grow within the brain.

The team found that when grafts were treated with low-intensity ultrasound, it improved the differentiation of organoid cells into neurons and helped improve the networks it formed with the host brain.

The technique could also lead to new treatments to treat neurodevelopmental disorders and repair damage to the cerebral cortex, the paper said.

“Brain organoid transplants are considered a promising strategy for restoring brain function by replacing lost neurons and reconstructing neural circuits,” the team wrote.

The team found that using low-intensity ultrasound on implanted brain organoids could ameliorate neuropathological defects in a test on a mouse model of microcephaly – a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by reduced brain and head size.

The university also said the team’s use of non-invasive low-intensity ultrasound treatment could help neural networks form and mature, providing a better foundation for computing.
 
>China
>Announcing ground-breaking technology without really explaining how it fucking works.
I call bullshit. That's a cheap toy with some organic slop on top that probably can't do half the things the article vaguely claims it does. Probably just a basic processor handling very basic inputs and sending similarly basic signals to a pre-programmed toy, which is interesting but not new.
You can buy about 95% of what they showed for 80 bucks. Just add some raw chicken and an old calculator and you can also fool you government for grants.
 
Last edited:
God bless the Chinese. They're doing all the hilariously unethical science experiments that the liberal governments of the West won't let us do. It's our loss when the Chinese are figuring out how to engineer the human genome and make cyborgs after the sacrifice of a mere few dozen million failed, possibly sentient experiments. It's really so unfair. There are so many manmade horrors beyond human comprehension that we could be playing around with and instead we're writing grant applications on green energy and justifying our DEI strategy. I'll give them all the DEI they could want the moment they let me engineer it.
 
God bless the Chinese. They're doing all the hilariously unethical science experiments that the liberal governments of the West won't let us do. It's our loss when the Chinese are figuring out how to engineer the human genome and make cyborgs after the sacrifice of a mere few dozen million failed, possibly sentient experiments. It's really so unfair. There are so many manmade horrors beyond human comprehension that we could be playing around with and instead we're writing grant applications on green energy and justifying our DEI strategy. I'll give them all the DEI they could want the moment they let me engineer it.
Tell us your prototype ideas.
 
There is absolutely no way this is real. I've seen a YT video of a team using rat neurons to make a computer capable of playing Doom (of course) and A: it looked nothing like this, B: they're still working on it and C: they're actually documenting their progress.

On point A: the neuroprocessor array the Doom guys devised had absolutely tiny amounts of actual tissue in each "chip", carefully sealed to avoid contamination or damage. This is a massive blob of meat with no protection, literally exposed to the air.

On point B: The Doom guys are still working on getting the finer points of getting neurons to acknowledge instructions down, albeit relatively successfully. These guys are claiming their robot can already do quite complex tasks.

On point C: The Doom guys are showing every single stage of their process in great detail. These Chinese guys...not so much.

What we have here is some degree of hoax, presumably to sucker some investor into giving them large amounts of money for an end product that will never materialize. I believe bio-computing may actually be a thing we eventually get, but not like this and not from them, and also not yet.

Also
>Implying the Chinese would ever be faced with a wad of living tissue and not immediately try to eat it
 
This is a massive blob of meat with no protection, literally exposed to the air.
It looks the way a stupid person would think it should. A big brain-shaped glob in a clear dish with a very obvious connector coming out of it. It's basically Krang. And I think they designed it this way on purpose because they knew sufficiently smart people would question it no matter how it looks, so they just went the sci fi route so midwits would take it at face value.

Of course there's always a very tiny chance this is actually real in which case I'm the clownful jester in this scenario, but I'm willing to take that chance.
 
Every single thing from China is fake and exaggerated in some way. Their economic numbers, the strength of their military, their infrastructure (tofu dreg bridges and literal fake fire hydrants)... I'm guessing this is more bullshit until they prove it.

At the very least they took someone's brain and put it in that contraption. Probably from a member of the happy, dancing minorities filling their tolerant land. Or it's actually grown in the lab, in which case we don't have to wonder where they got the stem cells, do we?💀
 
Back