Calgary
Scientists To Create Human ‘Neurochip’
The
science fiction of melding man and machine has
played out for decades onscreen, from The
Six Million Dollar Man to The
Terminator. But the bionic hybrid age may
well be flickering to life – real life –
in the Calgary lab where scientists who made
history fusing snail brain cells to a computer
microchip six years ago are poised to try the
same feat with human cells. Researchers at the
University of Calgary’s Hotchkiss Brain
Institute are to announce Tuesday that they
have made a key advance in connecting brain
cells to a newly designed silicon chip,
crafted with the National Research Council of
Canada, that allows them to “hear” the
conversation between living tissue and an
electronic device as never before. “It used
to be like seeing two people talking at a
distance. ... You didn’t know what they were
saying or even what language they were
speaking. But now it’s like putting a
microphone beside them,” said Professor
Naweed Syed, head of the university’s
department of cell biology and anatomy, who
has led the work on the so-called neurochip.