Avatar feed
Responses: 8
Capt Daniel Goodman
1
1
0
That was a quite good catch, you've been on a real roll, you've found some really useful stuff, honest...I'd expected it, I'd known about the planaria experiments, also the scotophobin transfer in rats, so while I obv hadn't heard of this group, I'm by no means surprised, certainly...look up he Orch(estrated) OR theory of neuron cytoskeletons, and the six bit dimer based ostensible basis for human memory, that was mentioned in sevl articles fairly recently, as well as by a physicist who was one of Hawking's postdocs, who published it with an anesthesiologist in Arizona who writes on quantum consciousness in that past site I'd sent in...let me send this, the tablet has been conking out....
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
1
1
0
Can we try it on congress next?
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
Capt Daniel Goodman
0
0
0
That it happens isn't surprising, I've suspected it for a long, long time...the difficult aspect deals with the genomic signal processing associated with such nucleotide sequences, which I've examined for a long time, even before my disability...I've approached the problem from the standpoint of an unknown operating system, relative to known operating systems...simplere organisms on the order of planaria are easier to deal with, snails are clearly above them, as rats are above them both...there's also a plant, which, when dropped, retains memory of being dropped and no longer curls its leaves, Mimosa pudica, if you look up the research, it was done by a botanist in Australia who's been researching the effect for yes...there was another researcher in Brazil who'd ifpund tat Mimosa pudica exhibits true binary automata aspects, I have his paper, I'd be very surprised if those memories of being dropped, with consequent desensitization, wouldn't also be similarly transferable...the other site you'd found, the electro laser one on Wikipedia, I realized that a charged laser could, I think, be used ophthalmologically to access the retina, plus, clearly, in other neurologic diagnostics, that was why I'd sent you those clinical references I'd found on its use...I'd only seen application in prostatitis, however, I still tink it'd be quite possible...nplong polynuceotide sequences, as well as polypeptides clearly exhibit quantum tunneling along the lengths of their molecules, I've noted sevl papers dealing with that topic as well, which I do think integral to memory in the Orch OR theory I'd mentioned...however, in he case of RNA transfer, he olivine puck worked sequence itself would clearly seem to convert sufficient information to allow transfer to a cortex, which is esp why the piece you found interests me to the extent it does...really, really good catch....
(0)
Comment
(0)
Sgt Wayne Wood
Sgt Wayne Wood
>1 y
Capt Daniel Goodman most of my research on neural processing for my M.S. was done on Aplysia Californica (California Sea Hare) which, while classified as a mollusc, is not a snail.

HUGE neurons in relatively simple networks. Defensive reactions were amenable to operant conditioning as well as long term retention.

In a word, they could be trained AND remember...

More than can be said for most high school students...
(0)
Reply
(0)
Capt Daniel Goodman
Capt Daniel Goodman
>1 y
I follow.,.was the masters bioscience? Engineering? Physics? Matthew? Bioengineering? Biophysics? I'd obv be most eager to hear more...I've heard of such simple nerve net species...the large neuron aspect I'd also run into before, I can't recall where, though I hadn't heard of that specific species...I'd really be most eager to know more, no rush, whenever you might have time, honest...
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close