The title of this thread should probably read "Connecting a battery to your head." I tend to use the wrong words sometimes. Attaching a battery to your head is a totally different thing.
Ok has anyone heard of transcranial direct current stimulation? Has anyone tried this? Does anyone know any more about it? Apparently all you need is a 9-volt battery, some wires and damp sponges. By attaching the sponges to your skull you can influence the way your brain works (or doesn't work) via the electricity of the battery. I think you also need a device to keep the amps to a minimum. Please though, don't anyone try this at home. Permanent brain damage is a potential side effect (though it looks to be unlikely if you take the proper precautions). I think by applying voltage you can influence the firing pattern in any specific area of the neocortex. The change in firing pattern is only temporary, however if you continually use the device (over the course of several weeks) it can lead to more permanent changes in brain function.(wasn't sure if this was the right section to post in, I didn't see it posted yet but if it has been you can delete it)
tDCS
Ingredients:
One (1) brain, inside skull
One (1) 9-volt battery
Two (2) wires
Two (2) damp sponges
Instructions:
Attach battery to wires, attach wires to sponges, attach sponges to skull, one over each eyebrow. Simmer once a day until mental health reaches a firm consistency.
It sounds like something you dreamed up in the basement with your stoner friends in high school. (In fact, you may actually have done so.) But transcranial direct current stimulation is the hottest thing to hit the improvisational health management scene since acupuncture. A growing body of evidence suggests that sticking a battery onto your head could hack into your brain's operating system and make life generally more worth living. Think of it as Norton Utilities for the mind.
That's not an oversimplification of the process. tDCS is literally that simple. The total cost of a treatment is less than $5 of parts from Radio Shack and a sponge. No prescription needed. No needles, no pills, no insurance companies, no weird hormonal fluctuations, no commercials saying "I'm glad [drug of choice] has a low risk of sexual side effects!"
An analysis of the pros and cons of tDCS yields fairly impressive results.
PROS
Improved hand-eye coordination
Better memory
Less depression
Recover from brain damage
Less senility
Me talks nice like teacher
Better memory
Control seizures
Cure migraines
Become superior human, crush puny unenhanced inferiors, survive apocalyptic "rise of the machines"
Better memory
CONS
Could end up looking stupid
Small, but not entirely absent, chance of permanent brain damage
tDCS
tDCS wikipediaStuart Gromley sits hunched over a desk in his bedroom, groping along the skin of his forehead, trying to figure out where to glue the electrodes. The wires lead to a Radio Shack Electronics Learning Lab, a toy covered with knobs, switches, and meters. Even though he’s working with a kiddie lab, Gromley, a 39-year-old network administrator in San Francisco, can’t afford to make mistakes: he’s about to send the current from a nine-volt battery into his own brain.
Gromley’s homemade contraption is modeled on the devices used in some of the top research centers around the world. Called transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), the technology works on the principle that even the weak electrical signals generated by a small battery can penetrate the skull and affect hot-button areas on the outer surface of the brain. In the past few years, scholarly research papers have touted tDCS as a non-invasive and safe way to rejigger our thoughts and feelings, and possibly to treat a variety of mental disorders. Most provocatively, researchers at the National Institute of Health have shown that running a small jolt of electricity through the forehead can enhance the verbal abilities of healthy people. That is, tDCS might do more than just alleviate symptoms of disease. It might help make its users a little bit smarter.
Say “electricity” and “brain” in the same sentence, and most of us flash on certain scenes from One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest. But tDCS has little in common with shock therapy. The amount of current that a nine-volt battery can produce is tiny, and most of it gets blocked by the skull anyway; what little current does go into brain tissue tends to stay close to the electrodes. By placing these electrodes on the forehead or the side of the head, researchers can pinpoint specific regions of the brain that they’d like to amp up or damp down.
tDCS
Entrez Pubmed
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Edited by hrc579, 11 December 2007 - 05:42 AM.