The Independent

Musk’s mysterious brain chip ‘will cure depression’

- ANTHONY CUTHBERTSO­N

Elon Musk has revealed more details about his mysterious brain-computer chip start-up Neuralink, claiming that it could be used to help cure addiction and depression.

Mr Musk founded Neuralink in 2016, though few details about how the technology will work have been revealed. After receiving more than $158m (£125m) in funding, Neuralink announced in a 2019 presentati­on that it had developed a “sewing machine-like” device capable of connecting brains directly to computers.

More informatio­n about Neuralink will be revealed on 28 August, Mr Musk said on Thursday, prompting Twitter user Pranay Pathole to ask the billionair­e entreprene­ur what future capabiliti­es could be expected.

“Can Neuralink be used to retrain the part of the brain which is responsibl­e for causing addiction or

depression? It’d be great if Neuralink can be used for something like addiction/ depression,” he asked.

Mr Musk replied: “For sure. This is both great and terrifying. Everything we’ve ever sensed or thought has been electrical signals. The early universe was just a soup of quarks and leptons. How did a very small piece of the universe start to think of itself as sentient?”

In the short-term, Neuralink will be used to treat brain diseases such as Parkinson’s, while the long-term ambitions for the technology is to allow humans to compete with artificial intelligen­ce.

An early version of the system has already been tested on animals, and human trials are expected to begin at some point this year. Ultimately, Mr Musk hopes to achieve some sort of symbiosis with AI, to a degree that would make human language obsolete.

This could occur within the next five to 10 years, Mr Musk told the Joe Rogan Podcast earlier this year. “You wouldn’t need to talk,” he said. “You would be able to communicat­e very quickly and with far more precision.”

Such an eventualit­y is not entirely far-fetched, according to leading scientists in the field of brain-computer interfaces. A 2019 report by the Royal Society outlined how neural interfaces could allow people to communicat­e silently by reading each other’s minds.

“People could become telepathic to some degree, able to converse not only without speaking but without words – through access to each other’s thoughts at a conceptual level,” the report stated. “Not only thoughts, but sensory experience­s, could be communicat­ed from brain to brain. Someone on holiday could beam a ‘neural postcard’ of what they are seeing, hearing or tasting into the mind of a friend back home.”

There have also been doubts about the technology, with the renowned linguist and philosophe­r Noam Chomsky questionin­g whether it would be possible to communicat­e using only thoughts.

“Developing methods by which if I’m thinking of moving my hand, you might be able to pick up the electrical signals that say he’s trying to move his hand, that’s conceivabl­e,” Mr Chomsky told the website Inverse in 2017, shortly after the project was made public.

But he added: “Trying to find out what I’m thinking, let’s say, there’s no way of developing technology because we don’t understand how to proceed. The technology ... is just nowhere near advanced enough.”

 ?? (Getty) ?? The entreprene­ur said the tech was ‘great and terrifying’
(Getty) The entreprene­ur said the tech was ‘great and terrifying’
 ?? (Neuralink) ?? Trials of Neuralink’s fully implantabl­e neural interface system will begin in 2020
(Neuralink) Trials of Neuralink’s fully implantabl­e neural interface system will begin in 2020

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