Artificial Intelligence , Reconstructs Music From, People's Brain Activity Data.<br />'Rolling Stone' reports that neuroscientists have <br />successfully recreated a piece of music from <br />electrical signals recorded in the human brain. .<br />In a study published in 'PLOS Biology,' data <br />from 29 people was analyzed by artificial <br />intelligence after they underwent brain surgery. .<br />While undergoing surgery, the patients were being <br />monitored for epileptic seizures with electrodes <br />recording electrical activity in the brain.<br />At the same time, participants listened to<br />Pink Floyd's song, "Another Brick in the Wall.".<br />The electrodes recorded electrical <br />activity in several brain regions tuned <br />to the sound of musical elements.<br />'Rolling Stone' reports that scientists then trained <br />an artificial intelligence model to decode the <br />information and reproduce the sounds of the song. .<br />According to the study, while the results were <br />garbled, the recreated tune was still recognizable. .<br />According to the study, while the results were <br />garbled, the recreated tune was still recognizable. .<br />The reconstruction was even able to capture some <br />words, including "all," "was" and "just a brick.".<br />The study's lead author, Ludovic Bellier, detailed <br />why the team chose Pink Floyd's iconic 1979 hit. .<br />The scientific reason, which we <br />mention in the paper, is that the song <br />is very layered. It brings in complex chords, <br />different instruments and diverse rhythms <br />that make it interesting to analyze, Ludovic Bellier, lead author, via 'Rolling Stone'.<br />The scientific reason, which we <br />mention in the paper, is that the song <br />is very layered. It brings in complex chords, <br />different instruments and diverse rhythms <br />that make it interesting to analyze, Ludovic Bellier, lead author, via 'Rolling Stone'.<br />The less scientific reason might be <br />that we just really like Pink Floyd, Ludovic Bellier, lead author, via 'Rolling Stone'