(hi res) TOKYO, Japan, March 31, 2009 - Honda Research Institute Japan Co., Ltd. (HRI-JP), a subsidiary of Honda R&D Co., Ltd., Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR) and Shimadzu Corporation have collaboratively developed the worlds first*1 Brain Machine Interface (BMI) technology that uses electroencephalography (EEG) and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) along with newly developed information extraction technology to enable control of a robot by human thought alone. It does not require any physical movement such as pressing buttons. This technology will be further developed for the application to human-friendly products in the future by integrating it with intelligent technologies and/or robotic technologies.
During the human thought process, slight electrical current and blood flow change occur in the brain. The most important factor in the development of the BMI technology is the accuracy of measuring and analyzing these changes. The newly developed BMI technology uses EEG, which measures changes in electrical potential on the scalp, and NIRS, which measures changes in cerebral blood flow, with a newly developed information extraction technology which enables statistical processing of the complex information from these two types of sensors. As a result, it became possible to distinguish brain activities with high precision without any physical motion, but just human thought alone.
http://world.honda.com/news/2009/c090331Brain-Machine-Interface-Technology/
Membrane556, sure you need to wear sensors now but then again the first computer was bigger then an average bedroom. does that mean people should stop working on it?
astropirate 1 year ago
Darpa has been playing with this since the 1990s
to help elevate information over load on pilots effectively giving them a third hand nothing new here.
On a side note all those very lame applications they showed will never be possible without a helmet full of sensors or worse a brain implant.
Controlling a crappy window AC or opening a trunk are very stupid applications for the technology they could use this to help the disabled regain some independence.
Membrane556 2 years ago