gusl: (Default)
As a child, I used to wonder why my mind corresponds to this particular body, and daydreamed about controlling other bodies, and extra limbs with my mind. What would it be like to have a third arm, or an elephant's trunk? What would it be like to be really tall and strong, or to inhabit a female body? The movie "Strange Days" has an "experience machine" that plays experiences into your brain, all 5 senses and perhaps some higher-level percepts; but IIRC, there was a clean Cartesian separation between body and mind, so that emotions were solely in the mind of the beholder.

A month or so ago, I read about the arm illusion, which suggests that our body image is largely manufactured by visual cues. Then I was struck with the idea of using something like Kinect to give the illusion of inhabiting another body. Today I was happy to find the Body Swap hack, though the polygons look rough and it mostly just looks like you've swapped clothing. The body dysmorphia project has better graphics, but apparently the only change it can make is to make you look more or less puffy.

Tangentially, your brain learns from visual feedback. Ramachandran has shown that one can get rid of phantom limb pain by exercises with a mirror box, which are really a form of visual biofeedback. It makes one wonder if living in virtual bodies that are very different from yours could make you physically awkward once you return to your real body.
gusl: (Default)
I love this definition of biofeedback:
<< Biofeedback is a process that enables an individual to learn how to change physiological activity for the purposes of improving health and performance. Precise instruments measure physiological activity such as brainwaves, heart function, breathing, muscle activity, and skin temperature. These instruments rapidly and accurately "feed back" information to the user. The presentation of this information — often in conjunction with changes in thinking, emotions, and behavior — supports desired physiological changes. Over time, these changes can endure without continued use of an instrument. >>

That is, without biofeedback, we are (even more) blind to the what is going on in our bodies and brains. And just as people who are blind from birth fail to develop certain skills (e.g. posture), people without biofeedback are missing out on greater levels of self-awareness.
One could argue that you should be able to do all this through introspection, but the fact is that introspection is too narrow as a channel... the brain is most unaware of itself. However, by encoding the brain's (or the body's) activity as image and/or sound, we have a decent channel in which to observe it at work, and thus learn to control it better.

Just as motor learning relies on visual/tactile feedback, neural control relies on neurofeedback.


This is really cool: R. C. deCharms et al - Control over brain activation and pain learned by using real-time functional MRI

<< If an individual can learn to directly control activation of localized regions within the brain, this approach might provide control over the neurophysiological mechanisms that mediate behavior and cognition and could potentially provide a different route for treating disease. Control over the endogenous pain modulatory system is a particularly important target because it could enable a unique mechanism for clinical control over pain. Here, we found that by using real-time functional MRI (rtfMRI) to guide training, subjects were able to learn to control activation in the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC), a region putatively involved in pain perception and regulation. When subjects deliberately induced increases or decreases in rACC fMRI activation, there was a corresponding change in the perception of pain caused by an applied noxious thermal stimulus. Control experiments demonstrated that this effect was not observed after similar training conducted without rtfMRI information, or using rtfMRI information derived from a different brain region, or sham rtfMRI information derived previously from a different subject. Chronic pain patients were also trained to control activation in rACC and reported decreases in the ongoing level of chronic pain after training. These findings show that individuals can gain voluntary control over activation in a specific brain region given appropriate training, that voluntary control over activation in rACC leads to control over pain perception, and that these effects were powerful enough to impact severe, chronic clinical pain. >>


It's just like motor control, but it's purely neural control.

February 2020

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