brain-computer interface
A robotic brain-computer interface
Submitted by MichaelVail on Wed, 05/21/2008 - 5:49pm.
California Institute of Technology (Caltech) engineers have developed a robotic device able to act as a brain-computer interface. This is the 'first robotic approach to establishing an interface between computers and the brain by positioning electrodes in neural tissue.'
A baseball cap that reads your mind
Submitted by MichaelVail on Mon, 05/19/2008 - 2:27pm.
It looks like an ordinary baseball cap. But when you put it on, the cap detects and analyzes the electroencephalogram (EEG) signals from your brain. It can even tell you if you’re getting too sleepy when driving based on your brain wave patterns. Similar technology could also allow you to control home electronics such as TVs, computers, and air conditioners, all by just thinking about them.
Standardizing the Brain-Machine Interface
Submitted by MichaelVail on Mon, 03/31/2008 - 5:40pm.
Earlier this year in a lab at Duke University, in Durham, N.C., a clever, raisin-gobbling monkey named Idoya made a robot move in Japan—just by thinking. And she wasn’t alone. She joined ranks with, among others, a paraplegic man who recently used his brain to move a cursor around a computer screen.
10 Important Differences Between Brains and Computers
Submitted by MichaelVail on Mon, 03/24/2008 - 4:33pm.
Although the brain-computer metaphor has served cognitive psychology well, research in cognitive neuroscience has revealed many important differences between brains and computers.
Brain-Computer Interfaces for Manipulating Dreams
Submitted by MichaelVail on Thu, 03/20/2008 - 6:11pm.
A first-generation commercial brain-computer interface (BCI) is being released by Emotiv Systems later this year. What does the future hold for BCI?
By 2050, and likely sooner, you will be able to buy a BCI device that records all your dreams in their entirety.
Pentagon's Mind-Reading Computers Replicate
Submitted by MichaelVail on Thu, 03/20/2008 - 1:27am.
"Augmented Cognition," the Darpa program to build computer interfaces that adapt to their users' brains, has officially run its course. But efforts to build mind-reading PCs continue throughout the military establishment.
The Pros and Cons of a Google Brain Implant
Submitted by MichaelVail on Mon, 02/25/2008 - 1:08pm.
In John Varley's upcoming scifi novel Rolling Thunder, everyone has a brain implant that lets them google information constantly. And many futurists are saying this technology will become a reality long before we colonize Mars. The question isn't whether we'll have google brain implants (or the futuristic search engine equivalent), but how we'll handle them. What exactly would be the plusses and minuses of being able to google information instantaneously in your head, without anybody knowing you're doing it?
A New Brain Interface Controller for Video Games
Submitted by MichaelVail on Wed, 02/20/2008 - 6:43pm.
Last night a company called Emotiv showed off its latest generation BCI (that's brain-computer interface) controller to a bunch of nerds from the Game Developer Conference -- including our sister site Kotaku's brave and fearless Brian Crecente. Basically, you stick this helmet on your head and control what's on screen via brain-generated electricity that's picked up by EEG sensors.
Brain blanket boosts mind control
Submitted by MichaelVail on Sat, 02/16/2008 - 1:19am.
With a sheet of electrodes placed over the brain, people can quickly learn to move a cursor around a computer screen using their thoughts. Early trials suggest that this new procedure could overtake more established brain-computer interfaces (BCIs).
Why Is Microsoft So Interested In Our Brains?
Submitted by MichaelVail on Fri, 01/18/2008 - 6:45pm.
When a Microsoft Corp. patent application for a method of sorting brain waves surfaced late last year, it drew quips that the company now plans to read PC users' minds, in addition to selling them software.
But the patent is only a starting point for a broader and more benign investigation into the subconscious, according to Microsoft researcher Desney Tan.

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