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dallinnervo

Dallinnervo is a fictional term used in speculative fiction to describe a neural interface protocol that enables direct bidirectional communication between a human subject and an artificial intelligence or computational system. In common portrayals, dallinnervo supports high-bandwidth data transfer and low-latency interaction, allowing users to issue commands through thought and receive sensory feedback as neural impressions or synthesized sensations.

Origins and usage

The concept emerged in early 21st-century science fiction and fan-driven wikis as a convenient label for advanced

Function and design

Dallinnervo is typically depicted as enabling a range of capabilities, from fast data exchange and direct thought-based

Cultural impact

As a storytelling trope, dallinnervo serves to explore human–machine collaboration, the boundaries of agency, and the

See also

Brain–computer interface, neural lace, telepresence, human augmentation.

brain-computer
interface
ideas.
There
is
no
real-world
technology
named
dallinnervo;
instead,
writers
adapt
the
idea
to
fit
their
worlds.
Variants
in
fiction
include
implanted
hardware
that
couples
to
neural
circuits
and
non-invasive
wearables
that
approximate
neural
access.
Some
narratives
emphasize
seamless
cognition,
while
others
focus
on
the
social
and
ethical
implications
of
such
intimate
technology.
control
to
immersive
sensory
sharing
with
machines
or
other
users.
Plots
often
explore
security,
privacy,
and
consent
concerns,
as
well
as
questions
of
identity
when
thoughts
and
memories
become
accessible
to
external
systems.
Realistic
depictions
tend
to
address
the
limits
of
current
neuroscience,
the
risks
of
hacking,
and
the
societal
impact
of
ubiquitous
neural
interfaces.
consequences
of
internal
experiences
becoming
external
data.
It
is
occasionally
discussed
in
in-universe
glossaries
and
fan
scholarship
as
a
thought
experiment
about
future
technology.