nakamura wrote:There is a lot of theoretic information in the internet on how this is done. But there is little that is conclusive. This system is said to, remotely and non-invasively, detect information by digitally decoding the evoked potentials in 30-50Hz, 5 millwatt electromagnetic emissions from the brain.
Someone told me that a 30 Hz E&M wave has a wavelength of over 6,000 miles, and lower frequencies would have even longer wavelengths and that only a few bytes per second can be transferred. Yet electromagnetic waves in the ELF frequency range (3–300 Hz) can penetrate seawater to depths of hundreds of meters, allowing communication with submarines at their operating depths
Can somebody clarify?
I really think we need a physicist to help us with this. I do a lot of research myself, and I use a lot of logic. I do not have a conclusive understanding of it because information on the physics that I have seen is not widely published anywhere, and I'd probably have to go to school.
This being said, I have read from a few sources that the frequency of rate of fire of neurons is actually really long, like 500ms to 4 seconds is duration of an evoked potential. this means the frequency of the neuron is firing at 2 to .25 Hz.
Now the frequency of the neuron somehow ends up being between 0-100Hz, as I documented from studying EEG. They say that alpha wave is Delta 0-4Hz, Theta 4-7Hz, Alpha 7-14Hz, Beta 15-30Hz, Gamma 30-100Hz+, Mu 8-13Hz.. right?
I cannot say with certainty what this frequency business really means. I understand that popular science is telling people that these 'frequencies' correspond to 'waves' that appear much like waves in the water, but do the frequencies really relate the size of the wave as they say? Many people do say for example that AM radio waves are several miles tall, but think about the brain. If the frequencies emitted from the brain are truly 6000 feet tall, how would that magnitude of a wave be created from such a tiny neuron, and how would it function in the brain? The brains interactions are all at the particle and atomic level, neurons and neuro-transimitters, and as I understand it, the electromagnetism is supposed to serve a purpose, in guiding the neuro-transmitters around in the synapse (but also activating and storing charge, and activating charge in other neurons, and tissue, which .. I won't go into right now, but look at how amazing muscle movements work). At least this is my theory, so how would a 6000 mile tall wave do that in the brain, precisely?
At the same time, I do not yet separate the magnetic and electromagnetic property, and physical transmission of electrons around in the mind. I do not have a model to go by to help me yet understand the movement of these particles and how it all works. This is something best left up to someone who does not have brain injury as I do and who went to college.
I am going to do more and more research into this but at this time, I do not have enough information at hand to tell me what is going on. And at the same time, I do not think many other people do either, because it does require quite the background. You literally have to look into how electrons even travel outside of atoms, and how they move between atoms, and build up a model of what makes up the neurons and the brain. And how electrons create a magnetic field, and what is the difference between magnetism and electromagnetism, and how the two laws governing these work together. I have not yet had the time or ability to look at it from this level, and I don't want to "generalize" any more like I've been forced to in the past.
I want to create a working model that actually explains this to the public, and .. I think the corporations have it, but keep the information secret for profit and intellectual property uses only. so the public doesn't get the chance to understand, that it probably is really simple, and doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand and all that .. I do want it all to be perfect and explain the whole process.
with that, I welcome others to jump in and build off this, to fill in the blanks, and help us understand this.
What I do think is going on, is that the brain emits radio frequencies, each and every neuron, and these frequencies can be imaged - the actually electrons can be imaged with the right gear, like say a satellite, and it can also be done in other ways like with radar.. I think what they do is they can tell when each neuron is firing, and through a computer interface like a neuro-feedback device, they track and observe how an individuals brain is working, and how the signals travel and where. I think they can pinpoint what regions of the brain are processiong what specific information, like from seeing the energy travel from the eye balls 'photo-receptive' neurons and into the mind over the optical nerve, and from their they can more easily pinpoint what part of our brain is tracking visual nerve impulses. once they have this information, and it's all done through automation in their computer system, they can begin to map out and observe visual processes occurring in a persons brain or eyes or and use it to extract other information. I do know that the neurons in the eye are layed out in a grid, with red, blue, and green wavelength sensitive rods or light sensitive neurons, and they can probably pretty easily tell the layout and whether a neuron is activated for what particular wavelength .. and once all these signals are mapped out, in real-time, as it's layed out in a grid, they have the picture of what a person is seeing. when their visual cortex is observed, they get access to a persons imagination, visual memory, and other tid bits in a similar fashion.
I believe the ears work the same - there are nerves laid out in a grid, and the direction of sound is determined only once it's processed in the brain, by triangulation of the signal, ie what nerves are hit first and how the nerves are hit over time. the ears have thousands of nerves connected to hair folicals in the ear, and at the neuronal level, there are thousands upon thousands of signals. they track these signals just the same as how they track vision, so they can hear what you hear, and extract audio memory, and whatever sound you imagine.
the brain can be decoded very fast by mapping out these signals individually, they begin to be able to probe different 'brain-nodes' or 'cortexes' for different things.
a persons overall 'perception' of all this is made up of billions of signals, .. all of which are subconscious, come together through stimulation and responses to signals that come into the mind. the mind itself can feed itself a signal through memory, or a dedicated cortex that handles it and evokes it and feeds it in ...
It gets complex, but in their computer system, they have designed something which has mapped out how neurons respond, how the signal travels and to where, where it, the original signal originates .. like from the body, or from a area in the brain, and this is all helpful in making it so they can determine exactly what it is.
for example, if they see a cluster of signals being generated from my finger region after I bang it with a hammer, they're going to be able to monitor a pain signal being generated and my brains reactions. they are going to see the intensities, they're going to see the signals fluctuating, and tie all this together. the same thing is true for light intensities, and colors (which are actually just different wavelengths of light, which probably translate into a specific signal in the mind. there may be a specific energy state in the mind/neurons that represents a red wavelength light, or a green one, or a blue one, which is the same in all animals. a couple of variables here is that blue light is not really blue light, it is a big spectrum of many frequencies that we perceive as shades, and each frequency might have a different intensity or brightness depending on the signal to noise ratio). . . .
All this can be observed with a massive computer system and a satellite or radar system.
And apparently, microwaves of very small scale, can be used to stimulate or recreate these very same signals. They know how to introduce the signal, and what signal they want to create in your bodily space. They might target your finger, to stimulate the nerves that trigger pain, to generate or simulate it in your body. If they use photons to actually create a pressure or compression on your nerve, they might even get your nerves to actually just generate their own pain signals.
They can tickle you the same, or they can activate a red pixel, blue, green, or the same in your mind this way.
I do not think specific frequencies are used, and like the patent by Robert Malech says, they can use any frequency they want (1MHz to 40GHz) .. and I will expand on that, because I think they can use upto ultra-violet frequencies to do this, which is almost exahertz frequency, .. Any two waves when they collide can generate a specific frequency, where it might be between 0-100Hz like the brains, or it might be a completely different frequency ..
I think that if they can change the frequencies in the mind, or use an external frequency to override the one that's coming from your neurons naturally, they can hi-jack a signal and implant what's essentially a rogue remote signal. Your brain picks this up, and incomes external visuals, audio, sensations, dreams, motor commands, whatever they put there. The signals can be subconscious and conscious (conscious signals are very complex, require manipulation of thousands of neurons at once; the signals must be introduced in the nerve pathways in such a way that they will come together to be perceived as a whole signal, just like how all the nerve impulses from the nerves in your eye, ear, body, or brain work).
There IS NOT A MASTER "SIGNAL" that has an image in it that just gets picked up by the brain. There are general signals that can inhibit and damage the brain, and maybe make you hallucinate or malfunction on purpose, but if they want you to see something specifically or hear something specifically, through remote nerve stimulation, they are targeting all your neurons individually.
they might even target specific parts of a neuron individually, because I imagine that the neurons have different electrical properties and different magnetic properties at different points. definitely on separate signals on each axom.

Someone with a PhD who's already worked with this, knows the names of cells, knows physics, and has it all learned will have to come in and fill in the blanks with a more scientific explanation. The above description is accurate, just needs expanded on, maybe corrected a little..
Voice to skull by the way, is a weapon that can create sound in the middle of nowhere by creating expansion/contractions of tissue or air/matter, it can create a pressure wave wherever it wants or create vibrations in material. This is why they can beam it at anyone, and anything, and not specifically your brain, and it works. Usually they target your skull or head, creating soundwaves inside your bones and soft tissue, which travel to your cochlea where the vibrations are converted to soundwaves by your nerves.
I think they can also create light waves like they do radio waves using the method described in the Robert Malech patent. (edit: I had an idea about this, but didn't build on it, it's incomplete: move down below for other explanation): they beam enough radiation at a single point, they're going to create light in the middle of nowhere, where that energy builds up. but it will be invisible until it reaches the point of intersection. they can also create pressure in your eyes to activate white light, trick the neuron into thinking it's activated ..
There are many ways to do it.
Robert Malech's radar patent:
http://www.oregonstatehospital.net/d/ru ... tremotebci Here's Malech's patent for creating 'difference waves' by colliding two radar waves of different frequencies at a single point. if they do 1GHz wave plus 1GHz+20Hz wave, it makes a 20Hz wave at the point of collision. and the 1GHz and 1GHz+20Hz waves pass through otherwise, I'd guess, or they reflect, or the energy absords leaving the access or difference energy of 20Hz..? you can make light-waves by colliding certain frequencies of x-ray, gamma, or ultra-violent, which are invisible to the human eye, but create a difference wave that is visible in the light spectrum.. I also think that radar can image electromagnetic frequency through the walls using the same method as imaging neurons..
How? Whatever frequency of radar they use, they broadcast it at say.. using infrared, and the difference between the infrared and light spectrum at the destination might create a microwave or several terahertz wave, that when read back will tell you what the precise frequency of light was at a certain point. they could infer precisely what a human might see using this type of imaging, exactly what is there in the room ..
edit: I hope this helps. I will be back to add in missing information, add to this, revise it, whatever.. latter.