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[阅读小分队] 【揽瓜阁 外刊精读8.0】Day6 2021.06.21【自然科学-医学、气候】

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发表于 2021-6-20 22:21:28 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |正序浏览 |阅读模式
  揽瓜阁俱乐部第八期
  Day6 2021.06.21

【自然科学-医学】Computers turn neural signals into speech(Science-779字 长阅读)

--Fed data from invasive brain recordings, algorithms reconstruct heard and spoken sounds

For many people who are paralyzed and unable to speak, signals of what they'd like to say hide in their brains. No one has been able to decipher those signals directly. But three research teams recently made progress in turning data from electrodes surgically placed on the brain into computer-generated speech. Using computational models known as neural networks, they reconstructed words and sentences that were, in some cases, intelligible to human listeners.

None of the efforts, described in papers in recent months on the preprint server bioRxiv, managed to re-create speech that people had merely imagined. In-stead, the researchers monitored parts of the brain as people either read aloud, silently mouthed speech, or listened to recordings. But showing the recon structed speech is understandable is "definitely exciting," says Stephanie Martin, a neural engineer at the University of Geneva in Switzer-land who was not involved in the new projects.

People who have lost the ability to speak after a stroke or disease can use their eyes or make other small movements to control a cursor or selection-screen letters.(Cosmologist Stephen Hawking tensed his cheek to trigger a switch mounted on his glasses.) But if a brain-computer interface could re-create their speech directly, they might regain much more: control over tone and inflection, for example, or the ability to interject in a fast-moving conversation.

The hurdles are high. “We are trying to work out the pattern of ...neurons that turn on and off at different time points, and infer the speech sound," says Nima Mesgarani, a computer scientist at Columbia University. “The mapping from one to the other is not very straight forward.” How these signals translate to speech sounds varies from per-son to person, so computer models must be "trained" on each individual. And the models do best with extremely precise data, which requires opening the skull.

Researchers can do such invasive recording only in rare cases. One is during the
ments, networks were exposed to recordings of speech that a person produced or heard
and data on simultaneous brain activity.

Mesgarani's team relied on data from five people with epilepsy. Their network analyzed recordings from the auditory cortex (which is active during both speech and listening)as those patients heard recordings of stories and people naming digits from zero to nine. The computer then reconstructed spoken numbers from neural data alone; when the computer "spoke" the numbers, a group of listeners named them with 75% accuracy.

Another team, led by neuroscientists Miguel Angrick of the University of Bremenin Germany and Christian Herff at Maastricht University in the Netherlands, relied on data from six people undergoing brain tumor surgery. A microphone captured their voices as they read single-syllablewords aloud. Meanwhile, electrodes re-corded from the brain's speech planning areas and motor areas, which send commands to the vocal tract to articulate words. The network mapped electrode readouts to the audio recordings,and then reconstructed words from previously unseen brain data. According to a computerized scoring system, about 40% of the computer-generated words were understandable.

Finally, neurosurgeon Edward Chang and his team at the University of California, san Francisco,reconstructed entire sentences from brain activity captured from speech and motor areas while three epilepsy patients read aloud. In an online test, 166 people heard one of the sentences and had to select it from sentences were correctly identified more than 80% the time. The researchers also pushed the model further: they used it to data recreate sentences from data recorded while people silently mouthed words. That's an important result, Herff says—“one step closer to the speech prosthesis that we all have in mind.”"

However, "What we're really waiting for is how [these methods] are going to do when the patient can’t speak” says Stephanie Ries, a neuroscientist at San Diego State University in California who studies language production. The brain signals when a person silently “speaks” or "hears” their voice in their head aren't identical to signals of speech or hearing. Without external sound to match to brain activity, it may be hard for a computer even to sort out where inner speech starts and ends. Decoding imagined speech will require "a huge jump," says Gerwin Schalk,a neuro-engineer at the National Center for Adaptive Neuro technologies at the New York State Department of Health in Albany."It's really unclear how to do that at all.”

One approach, Herff says, might be to give feedback to the user of the brain-computer interface: If they can hear the computer's speech interpretation in real time, they maybe able to adjust their thoughts to get the result they want. With enough training of both users and neural networks, brain and computer might meet in the middle.


【自然科学-气候】 Our Planet's Leaky Atmosphere ( WSY -548 字 短精读)





【笔记格式要求】
同学们精读这 2 篇文章并进行笔记打卡

精读笔记格式要求:
1.总结文章中心大意
2.总结分论点或每段段落大意
3.摘抄印象深刻或者觉得优美的句子
4.总结文章中的生词
5.记录阅读时间、总结时间、总时间

这里也给大家三点学习小建议哦~
精读:如遇到读不懂的复杂句,建议找出句子主干,分析句子成分,也可以尝试翻译句子来帮助理解~



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34#
发表于 2022-6-30 13:41:12 | 只看该作者
全文大意:
第一段:介绍流体力学逃逸的性质并因此判断流体力学逃逸是否发生过
        流体力学逃逸的性质:如果H元素充足,流体力学逃逸就会发生,并且会带着其他分子
        判断流体力学逃逸是否发生:分析大气元素中的组成成分
第二段:介绍在HD星的发现,并且介绍轨道半径和流体力学逃逸的关系
        HD星的发现:在HD星发现了流体力学逃逸,并且也发现了带走的碳元素和氧元素
        轨道半径:绕恒星轨道半径小的行星,流体力学逃逸会把大部分的大气都带走
第三段:发现增强了过去提出的一个说法,并用三个证据证明流体力学逃逸在三个星球上的发生
        增强过去说法:流体力学逃逸发生过在金星、地球、火星上
        三个证据:惰性气体同位素的差异、紫外线辐射、类地行星拥有H元素富足的大气层
第四段:论文说明流体力学逃逸发生在了水星并介绍其结果
        流体力学逃逸发生在过去的水星上,并且H元素带氧元素而没有带二氧化碳走的结果
33#
发表于 2021-7-7 21:18:10 | 只看该作者
day6 第一篇

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32#
发表于 2021-6-24 11:28:35 | 只看该作者
八 补Day6

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31#
发表于 2021-6-23 09:41:49 | 只看该作者
阅读时间5min
精读时间:34-
文章主旨:科学家通过研究转换大脑中的信号用电脑传递信息
失去说话能力的人们可以用小的行动来展示,电脑界面可以通过这些信号重组他们的语言
NM:整个过程的实现仍有很多困难,每个人的信号捕捉因人而异,过程需要开颅手术
M队
MA队
EC队
SR:希望可以应用到病人不可以说话的状态
生词:
Cosmologist 宇宙学家
Hurdle 障碍
Cortex 【解剖】皮质
30#
发表于 2021-6-22 21:24:24 | 只看该作者
啊第二篇看不懂
我发现通常第一篇外刊的就算不认识专业词语,猜也能猜到结果。用时10分钟
但第二篇原文就没那么走运了...向这篇生词好多还不了解背景的...细节题做不出来咯!这篇花了半小时,中间还睡了一觉

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29#
发表于 2021-6-22 17:11:06 | 只看该作者
D6补卡

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28#
发表于 2021-6-22 11:51:47 | 只看该作者
打卡!

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27#
发表于 2021-6-22 00:38:56 | 只看该作者
DAY6 打卡,如果有段落标明就好了惹,一段段数看完又忘记是哪段了orz

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26#
发表于 2021-6-21 23:59:00 | 只看该作者
day6

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