Scientists Reconstruct ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ From Patient’s Brainwaves

A research team with the University of California, Berkeley, reconstructed Pink Floyd’s iconic song “Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1” purely by decoding a listener’s brainwaves. Led by Dr. Robert Knight et al. and published in the journal PLOS Biology, the feat showcases how good humanity has become at decoding information that should be the last bulwark of privacy. In the future, someone with access to this technology wouldn’t even have to pay the proverbial penny for your thoughts: they’ll just be able to read them as well as one of those NYU ad walls.

The research, which took place between 2012 and 2013, strapped the brains of 29 epilepsy-suffering patients to electrodes (unlike other approaches, these had to be directly connected to the patient’s brain, meaning invasive surgery was required). The electrodes then captured the electrical activity of brain regions specifically responsible for music processing – areas that focus on pattern recognition and processing of tone, rhythm, harmony, and words.

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