May 25, 2015
Flying a jet via mind control
Jan Scheuermann, a quadriplegic and pioneering patient for an experimental Pentagon robotics program, continues to break ground in freeing the mind from the body. The 55-year-old mother of two in 2012 agreed to let surgeons implant electrodes on her brain to control a robotic arm. More recently, she flew an F-35 Joint Strike Fighter simulator using nothing but her thoughts, an official said.
Feb 16, 2015
X-ray vision with safe, visible light
Jan 31, 2015
Stroke Detecting Headset prototype from Samsung
Samsung’s Early Detection Sensor & Algorithm Package (EDSAP), developed by Se-hoon Lim, is meant to detect early signs of stroke. A multiple sensor headset records electrical impulses in the brain,
algorithms determine the likelihood of a stroke in one minute, and
results are presented in a mobile app. EDSAP can also analyze stress
and sleep patterns, and potentially be used to monitor heart activity.
The company believes that the system can one day be built into one’s
own glasses.
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Flexctrl brain, a new 32-channel BCI headset aims to speed up the development of brain technology
If you support only one BCI crowdfunding campaign this month, make it this one. Flexctrl brain is a stylish 32-channel brain-computer interface (BCI) packed with the latest technology, and will be developed by corwdfunding campaing on Indiegogo.
[ more ] [ project ]
[ more ] [ project ]
Nov 24, 2014
Playing action video games can boost learning
In the a new
study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Bavelier and her team first used a pattern discrimination task to compare
action video game players’ visual performance with that of individuals who do
not play action video games.
The action-gamers outperformed the non-action gamers. The
key to the action-gamers success, the researchers found, was that their brains
used a better template for the task at hand.
Aug 8, 2014
Artificial Retina
Physicists developed an interface to the optical nerve using graphene for an optical prostheses.
Graphene is viewed as a kind of "miracle solution": It is thin, transparent and has a tensile strength greater than that of steel. In addition, it conducts electricity better than copper. Since it comprises only a single layer of carbon atoms it is considered two-dimensional.
In 2010 the scientists Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov were awarded the Nobel Prize for their ground-breaking work on this material.
In October 2013, the "Graphene" project was selected alongside the "Human Brain Project" as a Flagship Project of the EU FET Initiative (Future and Emerging Technologies).
[ more ]
Graphene is viewed as a kind of "miracle solution": It is thin, transparent and has a tensile strength greater than that of steel. In addition, it conducts electricity better than copper. Since it comprises only a single layer of carbon atoms it is considered two-dimensional.
In 2010 the scientists Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov were awarded the Nobel Prize for their ground-breaking work on this material.
In October 2013, the "Graphene" project was selected alongside the "Human Brain Project" as a Flagship Project of the EU FET Initiative (Future and Emerging Technologies).
[ more ]
Jul 7, 2014
Brain controlled car steers, accelerates, brakes
AutoNOMOS and the Freie Universität Berlin are developing BrainDriver, the first car that steers, accelerates, and brakes based on its driver’s thoughts. In a recent experiment, Henrik Matzke drove a car at speeds up to 31 mph.
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May 27, 2014
First Tests of Thought-Controlled Aircraft Successful
Pilots of the future could be able to control their aircraft by merely thinking commands. Scientists of the Technische Universität München and the TU Berlin have now demonstrated the feasibility of flying via brain control – with astonishing accuracy.
(Photo : Courtesy A. Heddergott/TU München )
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May 7, 2014
Mapping brain activity with molecular precision
A new technique allows neuroscientists to precisely track neural communication in
the brain over time, using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) along with a
specialized molecular MRI contrast agent.
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Feb 1, 2014
Sugar-powered biobattery has 10 times the energy storage of lithium: Your smartphone might soon run on enzymes
Researchers at Virginia Tech
have successfully created a sugar-powered fuel cell that has an energy
storage density of 596 amp-hours per kilo — or “one order of magnitude”
higher than lithium-ion batteries. This fuel cell is refillable with a
solution of maltodextrin, and its only by products are electricity and
water. The chief researcher, Dr. Zhang, says the tech could be
commercialized in as soon as three years.
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