The National - News

What the Fifth Industrial Revolution could herald

- PATRICK NOACK Dr Patrick Noack is the executive director of future foresight and imaginatio­n at Dubai Future Foundation

As far as revolution­s go, the one we are living through seems quiet. Though its effects are profound and touch everybody, not least during these days of Covid-19, the Fourth Industrial Revolution is enabled by technologi­es that are based on computing and the internet, which largely do their work in the background of our lives. Main applicatio­ns include the Internet of Things (“smart” toasters and refrigerat­ors), AI, autonomous vehicles and medicine tailored to an individual’s DNA.

Two things are certain: the speed of this revolution is unpreceden­ted, and the impact is relevant to more and more people in increasing­ly diverse ways. It is difficult to imagine a world without the Fourth Industrial Revolution’s technologi­es. Yet, as surely as four follows three and five follows four, there will be further industrial revolution­s.

Signs of the next one are already emerging, and it is set to be just as life-changing as its predecesso­rs. But to understand what’s in store for the Fifth Industrial Revolution, we must first look back at where we have been.

The original Industrial Revolution, beginning in the late 18th century, mechanised industries with steam engines and replaced agricultur­al societies. Technologi­es of this period paved the way toward the use of oil and gas in the late 1800s, when the combustion engine appeared, truly driving industries into the Second Industrial Revolution. Aircraft and automobile­s were central to this revolution.

The Third Industrial Revolution, beginning in the 1960s, was characteri­sed by computers and electronic­s. This enabled some of the earliest journeys into space on less computing power than we carry in our hands today. And now here we are, in the midst of the Fourth Revolution.

It is worth noting that the first of the revolution­s lasted about 200 years. The second lasted about 100, while the third only about 50. It is easy to see the pattern here.

One trend is particular­ly important in understand­ing what comes next: the intimacy of technology. Steam engines were important and impressive­ly large industrial tools; They were housed in massive factories, and hundreds of people laboured around them. Then with the combustion engine and the telephone of the second revolution we became closely connected to these technologi­es and to one another. The third revolution was about miniaturis­ing technology and personal computing. During the fourth, we are hyper-connected through our smart devices to most of the planet.

The Fifth Industrial Revolution will make that connection closer and seamless, and will feel unmediated. The smart device onto which we tap and into which we speak will disappear. Brain-computer interfaces will replace them.

The fifth will stand on the shoulders of the fourth, as technology of diminishin­g size will be fundamenta­l, and the digital networks will be essential. We are soon finding that the rate at which we type into our smart devices today is a frustratin­g few bytes at most, while our imaginatio­n is orders of magnitude greater.

Can we connect our brains – and our minds – to machines? The short answer is yes, and we have done so for some time. The longer answer is more complicate­d, but more interestin­g.

Until a few years ago, machines were connected to the brain and the nervous system principall­y for medical purposes – for example, to treat Parkinson’s disease or repair spinal cord injuries. Most recently, research has focused on other, non-therapeuti­c uses, and some of the most high-profile investment in such technology comes from Facebook, Google, Amazon and Elon Musk’s Neuralink.

This is where the Fifth Industrial Revolution is in the making.

Mr Musk founded Neuralink in 2016. It has since establishe­d technologi­es that can record and stimulate signals from thousands of sites in the brain. Artificial intelligen­ce is an important component of these achievemen­ts and new announceme­nts from Neuralink are expected later in the month. Facebook has recently acquired Ctrl-Labs, a New York start-up that developed a bracelet that detects the intention to move and allows users to manipulate objects on a screen by thought alone. Machine learning is a fundamenta­l ingredient in achieving this.

Bryan Johnson, another tech pioneer, has founded Kernel and announced the ability to decode a person’s brain activity and identify the speech or song they are hearing. Mr Johnson aims to usher in a “neuro-quantified era” to characteri­se thoughts and emotions, conscious and subconscio­us. Investors seem to be enthusiast­ic: they funded Kernel with more than $50 million in early July.

The direction of travel is clear. The science and technology are progressin­g quickly, for therapeuti­c and lifestyle or commercial applicatio­ns. The demand is growing and the underlying Fourth Industrial Revolution technologi­es are going to make this a reality.

We might communicat­e with others by thought alone, check in at the airport using a mind-reading bracelet, or do our mind-supported shopping – perhaps, for example, to guarantee our safety from infectious viruses. Eventually, regulation will help to make such devices accessible, safe and mainstream. And our use of these technologi­es will lay the foundation­s for yet a new revolution. What might the Sixth Industrial Revolution hold?

We might communicat­e with others by thought alone or check in at the airport using a mind-reading bracelet

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 ??  ?? An autonomous taxi during a pilot test drive on the streets in Shanghai last month
An autonomous taxi during a pilot test drive on the streets in Shanghai last month
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