Comments [0] posted: Aug 09, 2007 Greg O'Byrne

So this comes up in sci fi a lot, beginning with "2001: a space Odyssey". In that movie Dave has to jump from the pod to the emergency airlock without a helmet.

He does it and it takes some seconds, approximately 10 or so..

It happens in the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy wherein Arthur and Ford are thrown off the Vogon Constructor Fleet ship and are rescue 29 seconds later by Zaphod in the Heart of Gold.

Total Recall had it where Quaid and Melina were exposed to the partial atmoshpere of Mars for awhile until the atmosphere kicked in.

It's in the new movie Sunshine too.

So how long can a human actually survive in the vacuum of space?

Turns out we actually have an incident, where the astronaut survived.

At NASA's Manned Spacecraft Center (now renamed Johnson Space Center) we had a test subject accidentally exposed to a near vacuum (less than 1 psi) in an incident involving a leaking space suit in a vacuum chamber back in '65. He remained conscious for about 14 seconds, which is about the time it takes for O2 deprived blood to go from the lungs to the brain. The suit probably did not reach a hard vacuum, and we began repressurizing the chamber within 15 seconds. The subject regained consciousness at around 15,000 feet equivalent altitude. The subject later reported that he could feel and hear the air leaking out, and his last conscious memory was of the water on his tongue beginning to boil.

[linky]

Bottom line: you have about 15 seconds until you pass out...and that will result in you...um...dying.

It's a nasty ride, you're blood boils, your skin blisters, you lungs might explode if you try to hold your breath...icky, icky.


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tags: [apollo | consciousness | rocket | science | sci-fi | space]

Comments [0] posted: Jun 26, 2007 Greg O'Byrne

Can we understand how the brain works?

What is our intuitive underlying assumption about brain that is incorrect? 

Take a watch and find out.


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tags: [brain | consciousness | TED]

Comments [0] posted: Jun 04, 2007 Greg O'Byrne

So.  Some stroke victims that have experienced paralysis on one side of their body experience something called "anosognosia".  They believe that the paralyzed limb attached to their body does not belong to them.

In fact, fibers in the motor cortex on the right side of her brain, which controls movement on her left side, have been irreparably damaged by the stroke, and she will never use her left arm again. But Mrs. M. is not a stubborn old woman refusing to admit a difficult truth. A few minutes later Mrs. M. looks at her left hand, resting inertly in her lap.

Doctor, she asks, whose hand is this?

Whose hand do you think it is?

Well, it certainly isn’t mine!

Then whose is it?

It is my son’s hand, Doctor.

They honestly, completely, consciously deny the fact that the paralyzed limb belongs to them. 

This article is fascinating if a bit long: The Brain That Misplaced Its Body

Should we design our AI to be weird too?

A tangential discussion can be raised around the attempt to create "hard" AI.  There a lot of people that think we are on the verge of creating AI.  I know, I know it's been talked about for decades but you must admit, there is compelling facts of computer speed and memory size that are providing some merit behind the discussion.

Well what if one of the key features of our intelligence is the plain weirdness of the architecture and structure of the human brain.  What if all the randomness and madness is a necessary "razors edge" that's needed to achieve consciousness and intelligence?

Can we architecture weirdness into a design?  Can logical computer scientists plan for all this fuzzy logic?

Can they make an AI doubt the existence of its limbs?


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tags: [brain | AI | consciousness]

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