Jesús Pérez @JesusEPO Analyzing neuronal activity like this can be challenging. If you’re working with similar data, Xsembles2P can make your ensemble analysis simple. #Neuroscience #EnsembleAnalysis #Xsembles2P https://pic.twitter.com/vNcGj0CZAN
Replying to @JesusEPO
Share the data in truly open formats and I will be happy to work with it. The problem with “neuronal activity” data on the Internet is that “everyone is doing their own thing”. Even your pictures are lossy and not immediately (right here, right now, complete) documented and usable.
You and others are working on “monitoring, permanently recording and interfacing the brains of all humans”, not just tens of thousands of disconnected academic and private demos.
(“neuronal activity” OR “neuron activity”) has 11 Million entry points and those groups, those humans, that data, that equipment, those methods, those situations, those purposes – taken as a whole, are a single concept on the Internet. Not many “everyone doing their own thing for themselves”, but a few ten or hundred thousand or millions working together globally for the human species entire future.
Please start thinking seriously about “the whole of things”. I change it a bit. Grok means “to do the whole of things”.
Please also start thinking about recording and playing back the memories.
In a very loose sense, that means mapping the response of the whole brain and person, so that the “playback” or “stimulation” maximizes and stabilized unique and repeatable experiences – of any sorts. It can be a simple as sex and entertainment, or stabilizing Parkinson’s, or memory for older people, or learning all languages in infants and humans of all ages. Or as sophisticated as internal visual training in dynamic volumetric fields for gravitational engineering.
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation