|
iPlant
|
Tervetuloa iPlant on aivoistute mikä ei periaatteessa ole erilainen verrattuna tämän päivän aivojen syvien osien stimulaatiolaitteisiin ('deep brain stimulation'), mutta jota ei vielä ole kehitetty ihmisille. iPlantin tarkoitus olisi säädellä monoamiinien vapautusta aivoissa, antaen täten sen käyttäjälle hallinnan omaan motivaatioon, oppimiskykyyn sekä luovuuteen. Tämän kaltaisia aivoistutteita on ollut olemassa ei-ihmiseläimille jo vuosikymmeniä: niitä on käytetty esimerkiksi motivoimaan rottia raskaaseen kuntoiluun ja oppimaan uusia toimintoja (Burgess et al 1991, Garner et al 1991, Hermez-Vasquez et al 2005). iPlants might also offer a more dynamic alternative to pharmacological modulators of monoamines, such as stimulants and antidepressants. Deep
brain stimulation implants are currently used to treat a number of psychiatric
conditions by modulating activity in the human reward system. For instance,
Medtronic's Reclaim
implant, which targets the nucleus accumbens, is
CE
marked in the EU and
FDA approved in the US for obsessive compulsive disorder. iPlants could be
implemented using the same technology and surgical procedure, but would involve
brief, strong, rewarding current (RBS), rather than the constant, weak,
normalizing current that is used at present. A patient-doctor agreement would
ensure that RBS was delivered if and only if the patient engaged in
pre-specified, beneficial behaviours, such as the use of a rowing machine, an
exercise cycle, an e-learning program etc. Artificial motivation by means of
conditional RBS is currently the most realistic and interesting application of
iPlants.iPlantit voisivat antaa ihmisille motivaation suorittaa vaikeita toimintoja kuten kuntoilua, oppimista tai tutkimusta (katso ohjelmointi). Ne voisivat myös tarjota dynaamisemman vaihtoehdon farmakologisille monoamiinien säätelijöille, kuten stimulanteille ja mielialalääkkeille. Tämän verkkosivuston tarkoitus on keskustella iPlantien kehityksestä.
Can you translate parts of the website to another language? Please email christopher@iplant.eu. ![]() All content on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons License. All proceeds from the store go toward maintenance and further development of the site. |
|||
|
Connect Follow @iPlant on Twitter Subscribe to the iPlant channel on YouTube Join the iPlant group on FriendFeed Become a fan of the iPlant on Facebook
|
|||
|
Content |
|||
|
Home About Fiction Monoamines and the reward system Rewarding brain stimulation Implant technology iPlant programming Safety and ethics Forum Store Video |
|||
|
Poll |
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Google Friend Connect |
|||
|
|
|||
|
Realtime |
|||
|
|
|||
|
Blog |
|||
|
New questions about the iPlant (February 2010) At the International Neuromodulation Conference in Seoul (September 2009) Does secularism fuck you up? (pt.2, pt.3) (June 2009) What we need to accelerate biomedical research and fight aging (May 2009) I can has freedom and dignity? (April 2009) Using Medtronic's Reclaim implant to generate artificial motivation (March 2009) Wired-article-induced neuroscience rant (March 2009) Riding a bike (December 2008) How compliant do we want our children to be? (December 2008) Thoughts on forks (December 2008) Aging (November 2008) Brainbeat (October 2008) |
|||
|
What the blogs say |
|||
|
The iPlant: Making life easier for the lazy?
(June 2009)
Enogamez iPlant (June 2009) Something Awesome iPlant Brain Implant Advocated for Self-Improvement (June 2009) Technovelgy iPlant - the motivational implant (June 2009) Futurismic A prosthetic motivational system (April 2009) Emerging Ideas Self-determination for the 21st century (April 2009) psique The iPlant (May 2008) Brain Stimulant |
|||
|
Zazzle items |
|||
|
|