Mind control gaming headset
For comparison, Google's microphone-based speech-to-text translation service has an accuracy of about 95 percent , according to Recode. My students and I have for a very long time been experimenting with new form factors and new types of experience that enable people to still benefit from all the wonderful knowledge and services that these devices give us, but do it in a way that lets them remain in the present.
The new paper describing the device was presented at the Association for Computing Machinery's ACM Intelligent User Interface conference in March, and has yet to appear in a peer-reviewed journal. Brandon has been a senior writer at Live Science since , and was formerly a staff writer and editor at Reader's Digest magazine. He holds a bachelor's degree in creative writing from the University of Arizona, with minors in journalism and media arts.
He enjoys writing most about space, geoscience and the mysteries of the universe. Live Science. Brandon Specktor. Your phone can remember videos [and] pictures perfectly. Your phone is already an extension of you. We need to make that tiny straw like a giant river, a huge, high-bandwidth interface. But in spite of all this hopeful futurism, BCI is likely still a few decades out from bringing our cyborg fantasies to life.
It is an extension of ourselves hurling us faster than we could run. It may be surprising that the technology necessary for bridging the wall between mind and machine have existed in some form since an era of rotary dial telephones and computers the size of living rooms. While the advent of machine learning and AI can sort of help, the signals available from EEG are probably at or near their peak performance right now.
Since , Dr. Unlike Dr. Flesher, she maintains the ability to read out brain and behavioral activity will get faster and more accurate over the next two decades. But for both Flesher and Read, the true future of brain-computer interfaces is within-head, with further experimentations into brain-computer interfaces which can be implanted into the brain.
Indeed, the idea of putting something into your brain for fun does seem like a big ask. Invasive brain surgery remains the domain of the medical community in and modern BCI implants are designed to help restore lost critical functions. But according to Flesher, invasive brain implants are likely to be adopted by the entertainment industry.
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The second bomb cyclone in a week could bring heavy snow and high winds to Atlantic Canada through Saturday. Klay Thompson had a very Klay-like reaction to not getting the ball on an open-look in transition. It looks like another storm, on Friday, will mostly miss this region. That process works by assigning tasks to a person's various brain wave patterns, which change depending on the individual's mental state.
So for instance, an EEG system could prompt a video game character to move forward on a screen if electrodes pick up brain wave patterns associated with drowsiness. The character could then stop moving if a pattern for sleep is detected. It's important to remember that EEG can't actually read a person's thoughts.
Instead, it connects neuronal patterns with actions or mental states. The technology may be able to identify patterns that arise from thinking certain words or phrases over and over again, but EEG can't decipher the specific words people are thinking — much less their desires. There are some other flaws with the system, too.
For starters: the users have hair. In clinical settings, EEG electrodes must be placed very delicately on the scalp in order to work properly.
All the oils from the skin must be wiped away first so that the electrodes can be glued to the skin. Without this kind of care, bad measurements can result.
A lot of objects we use every day have electrical activity, and that can show up on an EEG. The headset is meant to tell a wearer when he or she is properly meditating — but when I tried it out, the system continuously encountered errors.
Before my meditation, it asked me to focus on examples of cities or languages — perhaps as a way to pick up the patterns of when my mind is at work.
Then I was asked to clear my mind. But once I was finished meditating, the results seemed to make no sense. I was on a noisy showroom floor filled with journalists loudly performing on-camera presentations next to me, but according to the headset, my mind seemed to pivot between true meditative state and diversion frequently.
Instead, they could be sensing the electric current produced by muscles in the body; heartbeats and eye movements generate voltage that EEGs can read. That makes it hard to tell if a headset is actually measuring brain waves or just a furrowed brow.
But Marcuse thinks EEG holds promise for controlling devices. But as soon as a person moves an arm or even thinks about moving an arm, the pattern changes distinctly. This could be useful in the field of bionics. Since EEG is so sensitive to arm movements, patients could control a high-tech prosthetic limb, just by concentrating on how they want the limb to move.
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