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Just came across something wild - an Australian biotech startup managed to hook up actual human brain cells to play Doom. Yeah, you read that right. Living neurons connected to a video game environment.
So here's how it works: Cortical Labs cultured these human neurons and wired them into a system where they could interact with the classic Doom gameplay. The neurons received electrical feedback as rewards when they made correct moves, basically teaching themselves how to play. Pretty mind-bending stuff.
What's really interesting is that the neurons adapted and learned despite having zero actual understanding of what a video game even is. They were literally responding to electrical signals and optimizing their behavior based on feedback. It's like they developed a form of intelligence purely through neural adaptation.
This opens up some serious possibilities for how we think about biological computing and human-machine interfaces. We're talking about merging living neural tissue with digital systems in ways that were pretty much sci-fi territory just a few years ago. The potential applications go way beyond gaming - could reshape how we approach biotech, AI, and neural interfaces.
Definitely one of those video post moments that makes you realize how fast this space is moving. Biotech meets gaming meets neural adaptation. If you're into cutting-edge tech developments, this is worth diving deeper into.