Dugan, the hardware director of Facebook: brain sensors are not as far away as I imagined

Brain scans and skin sensors sound like science fiction, so when Facebook recently announced that it is working hard to develop similar technologies, it is easy to be satirized as a public gimmick for big companies to prove their innovation. In reality, however, in Facebook's hardware lab Building 8, more than 60 scientists and engineers are making detailed plans to achieve this sci-fi future.

In the next 18 months, Building 8 hopes to develop a prototype of a brain sensor that can type 100 in 1 minute. The team is also working on a plan to set up a team to study the ethical implications of brain scans. Building 8 director Regina Dugan and two other members recently accepted an exclusive interview with mainstream US online media to discuss the team's progress and future plans.

Facebook硬件主管雷吉纳:大脑传感器并非想象那样遥远

Building 8 Director Regina Dugan

Although Facebook's ability to interact directly with the human brain can take years to become a reality, Dugan and his team are very optimistic about their research prospects, which they believe can have a huge impact on Facebook's business and society as a whole. Dugan said: "We have a complete product release team, and their job is to promote our products on a large scale."

Facebook Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer also stressed the importance of Building 8 efforts in an interview. He said that this laboratory is not a simple "random creative factory", nor can it never launch actual products. Dugan said that the main goal of the team now is to develop a prototype of the sensor that will not harm the brain within 18 months. It should be able to turn the idea into a 100-word text in 1 minute. The next task for Building 8 is to figure out how to mass produce brain sensors and sell them.

Dugan was the head of ATAP (Advanced Technology And Projects), the mysterious department of Google (microblogging), and joined Facebook in 2016. She said that Facebook plans to form an ethics and legal team with external partners in Building 8 to study the privacy and health impact of brain scans. Mark Chevillet, a neuroscientist recruited by Dugan in 2016, was responsible for transforming thinking into a text project. He said: "This technology is still in its infancy and we face many major challenges."

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