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View Full Version : OH NO! Brain control headset for gamers!


ak87
20-02-2008, 10:45 AM
Brain control headset for gamers
By Darren Waters
Technology editor, BBC News website, San Francisco


Emotiv's Tan Le wears the Epoc headset

Gamers will soon be able to interact with the virtual world using their thoughts and emotions alone.
A neuro-headset which interprets the interaction of neurons in the brain will go on sale later this year.

"It picks up electrical activity from the brain and sends wireless signals to a computer," said Tan Le, president of US/Australian firm Emotiv.

"It allows the user to manipulate a game or virtual environment naturally and intuitively," she added.

The brain is made up of about 100 billion nerve cells, or neurons, which emit an electrical impulse when interacting. The headset implements a technology known as non-invasive electroencephalography (EEG) to read the neural activity.


Ms Le said: "Emotiv is a neuro-engineering company and we've created a brain computer interface that reads electrical impulses in the brain and translates them into commands that a video game can accept and control the game dynamically."


See how the headset works
Headsets which read neural activity are not new, but Ms Le said the Epoc was the first consumer device that can be used for gaming.

"This is the first headset that doesn't require a large net of electrodes, or a technician to calibrate or operate it and does require gel on the scalp," she said. "It also doesn't cost tens of thousands of dollars."

The use of Electroencephalography in medical practice dates back almost 100 years but it is only since the 1970s that the procedure has been used to explore brain computer interfaces.


The headset could be used to improve the realism of emotional responses of AI characters in games
Tan Le, Emotiv

The Epoc technology can be used to give authentic facial expressions to avatars of gamers in virtual worlds. For example, if the player smiles, winks, grimaces the headset can detect the expression and translate it to the avatar in game.

It can also read emotions of players and translate those to the virtual world. "The headset could be used to improve the realism of emotional responses of AI characters in games," said Ms Le.

"If you laughed or felt happy after killing a character in a game then your virtual buddy could admonish you for being callous," she explained.

The $299 headset has a gyroscope to detect movement and has wireless capabilities to communicate with a USB dongle plugged into a computer.

The Emotiv said the headset could detects more than 30 different expressions, emotions and actions.

They include excitement, meditation, tension and frustration; facial expressions such as smile, laugh, wink, shock (eyebrows raised), anger (eyebrows furrowed); and cognitive actions such as push, pull, lift, drop and rotate (on six different axis).

Gamers are able to move objects in the world just by thinking of the action.

Emotiv is working with IBM to develop the technology for uses in "strategic enterprise business markets and virtual worlds"

Paul Ledak, vice president, IBM Digital Convergence said brain computer interfaces, like the Epoc headset were an important component of the future 3D Internet and the future of virtual communication.


THOUGHT-CONTROLLED GAMING HEADSET

Sensors respond to the electrical impulses behind different thoughts; enabling a user's brain to influence gameplay directly
Conscious thoughts, facial expressions, and non-conscious emotions can all be detected
Gyroscope enables a cursor or camera to be controlled by head movements
The headset uses wi-fi to connect to a computer




The words BRAIN CONTROL in the headline make me worried enough! Shouldn't it be 'brain controllED headset' anyway? The bbc's trying to tell us something...
A major step?:eek::eek::eek:

killmicrosoft
20-02-2008, 11:22 AM
http://www.emotiv.com/

deca
20-02-2008, 03:35 PM
video on link

http://emotiv.com/corporate/

Dam cool video, see how they can sense your facial movments from reading your brainwaves

ak87
20-02-2008, 09:40 PM
This is ridiculous, I think this example should be used to show people show how our brain waves can be manipulated so easily

deca
21-02-2008, 12:11 PM
check out "persingers god helmet" or "brain entertainment" and "Transcranial magnetic stimulation"

kallista
21-02-2008, 01:04 PM
Check Alan Watt at cuttingthroughthematrix.com for more details

kblood
21-02-2008, 01:19 PM
Seems there is quite a few commercial products like this, I think this is the first that has been made purely for entertainment though.

They have made a helmet for a monkey, and the monkey could then control a robot monkey in Japan, while the monkey was in the US. They could see the robot monkey on a monitor through webcam :) I dont have the link to the article atm.

deca
21-02-2008, 01:59 PM
there is the neurosky head set with less sensors that uses clever algorthyms to work out brainwaves
http://www.neurosky.biz/

Neurosky
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQWBfCg91CU

2013
21-02-2008, 07:18 PM
I dont think that there is anything wrong with the technology , used by
concious people for the good it is ok but are we ready for this level of technology yet, considering the abuses that it will be put to probably not , but if there was a shift in human thinking and behaviour then perhaps it could be used to benefit us all :D

kblood
21-02-2008, 08:10 PM
I dont think that there is anything wrong with the technology , used by
concious people for the good it is ok but are we ready for this level of technology yet, considering the abuses that it will be put to probably not , but if there was a shift in human thinking and behaviour then perhaps it could be used to benefit us all :D

Problem is not that it is now being used for good, problem is it proofs how easily it could be true that it has been used for manipulating others in the past.

The amount of good stuff that is possible with this is quite a long list. Especially when it comes to replacing lost limbs.

real6
21-02-2008, 11:24 PM
Just found this new pic of it!!!

http://i50.photobucket.com/albums/f303/5DB/Misc/handsfree.jpg