The Commercial Appeal

Tech billionair­e Musk wants brains, computers linked

- MAE ANDERSON

Tech billionair­e Elon Musk has created an electric car company and launched a space mission business. Now’s he’s ramping his latest venture — Neuralink.

It focuses on linking brains to computers.

Brain implants will be developed that can treat neural disorders — and possibly put humanity on a more even footing with possible future superintel­ligent computers.

Musk, a founder of the electric-car company Tesla Motors and the private space-exploratio­n firm SpaceX, has become an outspoken doomsayer about the threat artificial intelligen­ce,or AI, might one day pose to the human race.

Continued growth in AI cognitive capabiliti­es, he and like-minded critics suggest, could lead to machines that can outthink and outmaneuve­r humans with whom they might have little in common.

Some neuroscien­tists and futurists, however, caution against making overly broad claims for neural interfaces.

Hooking a brain up to electronic­s is itself not new.

Doctors implant electrodes in brains to deliver stimulatio­n for treating such conditions as Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy and chronic pain.

In experiment­s, implanted sensors have let paralyzed people use brain signals to operate computers and move robotic arms. Last year, researcher­s reported that a man regained some movement in his own hand with a brain implant. Musk’s proposal goes beyond this. Although nothing is developed yet, the company wants to build on those ex-

isting medical treatments as well as one day work on surgeries that could improve cognitive functionin­g.

Neuralink is not the only company working on artificial intelligen­ce for the brain. Entreprene­ur Bryan Johnson, who sold his previous payments startup Braintree to PayPal for $800 million, last year started Kernel, a company working on “advanced neural interfaces” to treat disease and extend cognition.

Neuroscien­tists say that the technology that Neuralink and Kernel are working on may indeed come to pass, though it’s likely to take much longer than the four or five years Musk has predicted.

Brain surgery remains a risky endeavor; implants can shift in place, limiting their useful lifetime; and patients with implanted electrodes face a steep learning curve being trained how to use them.

“It’s a few decades down the road,” said Blake Richards, a neuroscien­tist and assistant professor at the University of Toronto. “Certainly within the 21st century, assuming society doesn’t implode, that is completely possible.”

Amy Webb, chief executive of Future Today Institute, pointed out that the Neuralink announceme­nt is part of a much larger field of human-machine interface research, dating back over a decade, performed at the University of Washington, Duke University and elsewhere.

Too much hype from one “buzzy” announceme­nt like Neuralink, she said, could lead to another “AI Winter.” That’s a reference to the overhype of AI during the Cold War, which was followed by a backlash and reduced research funding when its big promises didn’t materializ­e.

“The challenge is, it’s good to talk about potential,” Webb said. “But the problem is if we fail to achieve that potential and don’t start seeing all these cool devices and medical applicatio­ns we’ve been talking about then investors start losing their enthusiasm, taking funding out and putting it elsewhere.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG, AP ?? Elon Musk, CEO and CTO of SpaceX, introduces the SpaceX Dragon V2 spaceship at the SpaceX headquarte­rs in Hawthorne, Calif. on May 29, 2014.
JAE C. HONG, AP Elon Musk, CEO and CTO of SpaceX, introduces the SpaceX Dragon V2 spaceship at the SpaceX headquarte­rs in Hawthorne, Calif. on May 29, 2014.

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