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Wednesday, December 19, 2018

In the early 1970s Jose Manuel Rodriguez Delgado, a professor of physiology at Yale University, was among the world’s most acclaimed—and controversial—neuroscientists. In 1970 the New York Times Magazine hailed him in a cover story as the “impassioned prophet of a new ‘psycho-civilized society’ whose members would influence and alter their own mental functions.” The article added, though, that some of Delgado’s Yale colleagues saw “frightening potentials” in his work. Delgado, after all, had pioneered that most unnerving of technologies, the brain chip—an electronic device that can manipulate the mind by receiving signals from and transmitting them to neurons. He implanted radio-equipped electrode arrays, which he called “stimoceivers,” in cats, monkeys, chimpanzees, gibbons, bulls and even humans, and he showed that he could control subjects’ minds and bodies with the push of a button. Yet after Delgado moved to Spain in 1974, his reputation in the U.S. faded, not only from public memory but from the minds and citation lists of other scientists. He described his results in more than 500 peer-reviewed papers and in a widely reviewed 1969 book, but these are seldom cited by modern researchers. In fact, some familiar with his early work assume he died. But Delgado, who recently moved with his wife, Caroline, from Spain to San Diego, Calif.







bodies control delgado electrode implanted Jose Manuel minds radio equipped Rodriguez stimoceivers



In the early 1970s Jose Manuel Rodriguez Delgado, a professor of physiology
at Yale University, was among the world’s most acclaimed—and
controversial—neuroscientists. In 1970 the New York Times Magazine
hailed him in a cover story as the “impassioned prophet of a new ‘psycho-civilized
society’ whose members would influence and alter their own
mental functions.” The article added, though, that some of Delgado’s Yale
colleagues saw “frightening potentials” in his work.
Delgado, after all, had pioneered that most unnerving of technologies, the
brain chip—an electronic device that can manipulate the mind by receiving
signals from and transmitting them to neurons.

He implanted radio-equipped electrode
arrays, which he called “stimoceivers,”
in cats, monkeys, chimpanzees, gibbons,
bulls and even humans, and he showed
that he could control subjects’ minds and
bodies with the push of a button.
Yet after Delgado moved to Spain in
1974, his reputation in the U.S. faded,
not only from public memory but from
the minds and citation lists of other scientists.
He described his results in more
than 500 peer-reviewed papers and in a
widely reviewed 1969 book, but these
are seldom cited by modern researchers.
In fact, some familiar with his early work
assume he died. But Delgado, who recently
moved with his wife, Caroline,
from Spain to San Diego, Calif.

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