• monkeys with a 3rd robot arm

    Not sure if it’s the same, but I see a video of that and the monkey’s arms are partially restricted and still moving (and another where it says reenactment at the start). Interesting, but it might just be a cloned signal rather than independent control.

    Though I guess swapping control between sets and some basic commands (hold, gimbal, return to rest pose etc) wouldn’t be bad (especially the more naturally it can be controlled) it just seems like something different if it isn’t independent control.

    full-brain mesh of electrodes, could allow people to use multiple full bodies at once
    or that multiple brains couldn’t be connected and made work in parallel (brain hemispheres already do that

    I’ve had the exact opposite thought, multiple brains (in the sense of multiple people) residing in the same body. Usage shifts (to allow rest), partial control, or even simply observation/eyes-in-the-back-of-your-head/backup/advice/talking etc.

    That definitely would allow at least 4 arms.

    On a sidenote, in the Blender Open Movie CHARGE there’s a cool robot design where it starts out with 1 big (no-hand) arm and 2 little arms on the other side and then it transforms that (at 1:40) into 2 normal arms.

    • I see a video of that and the monkey’s arms are partially restricted and still moving (and another where it says reenactment at the start)

      I seem to remember a video where it peeled a banana using both an artificial and its own hand at the same time… and also solved a “touch points on the screen” test… but it’s been some time ago, so maybe I’m hallucinating it 🤷

      multiple brains (in the sense of multiple people) residing in the same body. Usage shifts (to allow rest)

      Like what dolphins do, about sleeping with only one hemisphere at a time? I always wondered whether it causes dolphins to have split personalities, or something; supposedly sleep is needed for integrating experiences, so both hemispheres could be integrate some shared, but other exclusive experiences separately.

      Or maybe they “daydream”, with the awake hemisphere receiving the dreams of the sleeping one, so it can integrate them when it goes to sleep. Would be interesting to learn more about that… also from an AI training integration point of view.

      backup/advice/talking

      There… might… be a built-in mechanism in all human brains to do just that. Check out the “Third Man Syndrome”, and the related “God Helmet” experiment:

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_man_factor

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_helmet