Update on Consumer Brain-Computer Interaces
Affordable, reliable and perhaps even sexy heads sets that read your brain waves and algorithms that translate them into signals that control computers, games and other devices.
When
As mentioned in previous posts, hopefully yet this year. NeuroSky has released technology to its OEMs and has announced deals with Sega and others. Check out their latest gear and application ideas here.
Emotiv Systems released this picture of their headset:
This headset has 16 sensors (medical grade gear has 120) and the NeuroSky’s system amazingly has only has one. They are targeting December of 2008 with a retail price of $299.
Other firms with products in the pipeline include EmSense, and Hitachi. There is additional action outside the US. Check out the headset on the g.tech BCI research platform that won the European ICT prize in 2007:
The system (shown below) has been billed at the first commercially available brain-computer interface and has receive a good deal of buzz. Although not a mass market “consumer friendly” system (more of a research platform) it has been used to update the classic game of pong:
September 11th, 2009 at 2:01 pm
Deep Computed BCI: A Short Story
Imagine your motor cortex fully activated while you have full muscle tone but both what your cortex says you are experiencing and what you are actually experiencing are not what you body is actually doing. You were trained to do this on a brain computer interface. Highly Skilled lucid dreamers in intense sessions and brain tomography on the level of seismic tomography make this all possible. Accessing the brain thru non-invasive means is vital in Berlin where Brain Computer Interfacers and the Locked-in are moving things with only their minds; however, one might say that all this research is treading water awaiting advances in Neuro-surgery. I’m pitching the thoroughly developed non-invasive technique as a necessary prelude to the invasive interface. I’m just looking for sympathetic places to post the story I’m telling in the form of a fictitious photo journal.