Thursday, May 10, 2007

It's 7am...

I've had no sleep for a couple days...
MatLab in crunching away and stealing application focus on monitor 2...
I've had 4 shots of espresso in the last hour...
SfN abstracts are due in less than 36 hours...

... and I decide to start a blog. Sure, what's one more commitment?

Welcome to my neuroscience and Brain Computer Interface (BCI)/Brain Machine Interface (BMI)/Neuroprosthetics/Rehabilitative Neural Engineering/Doo-Dads In your Brain blog. Over the past couple months I've been gathering new information in the BCI field on an almost daily basis, and thought this might a) help me organize that information and b) provide others with some entertainment plus a venue to discuss ideas related to BCI.

Don't let my informal language deter you. I assure you, I am as sharp as a bowling ball. This is my generally preferred whimsical tone, and if you crave the stuffy ultra-precision of a 24/7 nose to the grindstone scientist, well, I won't be offended if you trek off mid-article to bask in the cold dehumanizing comfort of the Neural Computation journal. Not all the posts will be this informal, but be aware that some will.

Feel free to check out my bio, as soon as I figure out where that is myself (I've had a GMail account for all of 10 minutes now). The basics? I am a second year grad student in the lab of John Donoghue at Brown University, involved in the analysis of human neural implant data as part of the CyberKinetics BrainGate clinical trials. Yes, I am a graduate student, but as JD says, I'm one of those types that has lived several lives before returning to grad school. I am also the Senior Editor of the Digital Trends website, where I do product reviews, articles, and host the site's podcast. The folks there have stuck with me through some crazy times, and have absolutely earned my trust. They're good people. Before my time at Brown, I was a pharma rep, and before that a research neurophysiologist/programmer for Phil Kennedy, one of the pioneers of the invasive BCI field. I graduated from Emory University, with a double BS in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology (NBB) and Computer Science (minored in Philosophy).

This blog is intended to be focused on BCI, but there is a good chance I will delve into other topics related to neuroscience. As I said, there is a selfish motivation in creating this site, and one extension of that is the idea that it gives me a reason to pull together information, organize my thoughts, and express them in a (hopefully) clear manner.

With any public discussion of science and lab work there is a balance I am going to have to keep between disclosure and protection of my work. While there is very little chance I will be 'scooped' - the number of labs analyzing neural data from human implant subjects can be counted on one hand - I have to protect my projects and those of my fellow lab mates (and CyberKinetics, Inc, and the identities of patients). So let me say this now: The views expressed here are solely mine. They are not the views of CyberKinetics, Inc, Brown University, Neuroscience Graduate Program, The Donoghue Lab, John Donoghue/Michael Black/Jerome Sanes/Leigh Hochberg/etc. There will be no discussion of this material. Got it? Legal repercussions due to my caffeine infused, ADHD-esque, scatterbrained, sleep-deprived decisions are unacceptable! The decisions themselves, though, are delicious.

I will possibly be hosting a sister blog via Digital Trends on purely technology related topics. When that goes live, I'll announce it here as well. I have to budget my time wisely, with my primary obligation to the lab/grant, but I work best when I am distracted. it sounds counter-intuitive, but my attention fades quickly, and if I don't have a related 'distractor', I tend to drift away into unrelated work.

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