A year and a half ago, we published a great feature  on the current state of the quest to read the human mind. It included  some then in-progress work from Jack Gallant, a neuroscientist at U.C.  Berkeley, in which Gallant was attempting to reconstruct a video by  reading the brain scans of someone who watched that video--essentially  pulling experiences directly from someone's brain. Now, Gallant and his  team have published a paper on the subject in the journal Current Biology.
This is the first taste we've gotten of what the study actually produces. Here's a video of the reconstruction in action:
 The reconstruction (on the right, obviously) was, according to Gallant,  "obtained using only each subject's brain activity and a library of 18  million seconds of random YouTube video that did not include the movies  used as stimuli. Brain activity was sampled every one second, and each  one-second section of the viewed movie was reconstructed separately." 
by "environment clean generations"

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