Melbourne-based startup Cortical Labs has received $400,000 with the support of the “Dollars in the Frame” New Developments program from the National Intelligence Service Avenue stralia. We are talking about the development of the DishBrain project, which became a sensation last year. The combination of human and rodent brain cells in the blood with the identified stimulant became a harbinger of the emergence of technologies for a new version of artificial intelligence.

The Australian military is interested in the potential of the “brain on a chip” as it is neither a brain nor a chip. The living structure of a set of cells allows you to grow, increase properties, transport and, in turn, endlessly improve. They are devoid of technical limitations, which are by default in all manifestations of the strength of its design.

At the same time, the detection of brain tissue is neither an organ nor a part of any part, it is only a small number of cells on a substrate that receives nutrition and stimulation to perform various tasks. They don’t grow up to be essentially individual, and they have no grips, no goals, no tasks, relatively easy to manage. To this extent the leaves form the lowest evolutionary, Australian nationality, and the lower rows in the “brains on a chip” move at an accelerated pace and grow in a useful way.

Brain on a chip

Source: Tech Cult

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I am a professional journalist and content creator with extensive experience writing for news websites. I currently work as an author at Gadget Onus, where I specialize in covering hot news topics. My written pieces have been published on some of the biggest media outlets around the world, including The Guardian and BBC News.

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