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Touchpads are so last year. A new study in Nature suggests that "thought-pads" could be in our future. Twelve epilepsy patients with wires implanted in their brains (common in sufferers of severe epilepsy) had those wires hooked up to a computer. Researchers showed them two images, then told the patients to try to "think away" one of the images by focusing on the other. "The subjects were able to use their thoughts to override the images they saw on the computer screen," said Dr. Itzhak Fried, a UCLA neurosurgeon who authored the study. The 12 subjects collectively tried the exercise 900 times, and were successful almost three quarters of the time. (Citing patient confidentiality, Fried's coauthor Dr. Moran Cerf apologized that he couldn't share an image of the clinical set-up. Instead, enjoy this wonderfully trippy image of a jacked-in man obsessed with über-celebrities who died tragically before their time.)

This all might seem very sci-fi, but it's a realm of science that has been brewing for years. Brain-computer interfaces, or BCIs, as they're called, are becoming an increasingly common feature of the medical landscape, as neurological researchers seek to help paralytics escape the prison of their immobile bodies. We may not be in the realm of Avatar quite yet, but as this slideshow demonstrates, we're getting there.

Moran Cerf and Itzhak Fried

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