Toys You Control With Your Brain
Kaliann writes "Toys that respond to brainwaves are the next generation of unique user interfaces. The Washington Post looks at the current market appeal and future uses of technology that can meaningfully respond to the thoughts of a user. Currently the toys have a fairly simple basic idea: the harder you concentrate the more the object moves. A sensor on the forehead picks up brain waves that are associated with concentration, then levitates a ball in response: basic biofeedback. While this may seem to be a rather humble beginning, progress in this field could have astounding consequences in the advancement of technologies devoted to thought-controlled devices. As the author points out, Jedi Beer Pong is within our grasp."
Namely, my hand and my penis. I can guarantee they've provided me with more enjoyment over the past few decades than anything in TFA ever could.
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You mean you have to use your hands? That's a baby's toy!
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I've convinced plenty of stoned chicks that they can move my penis with their minds.
Are these things going to "just work" or is there going to be some sort of "not enough midichlorians" BS problem when I get mine home?
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These toys may be cool, but I can already see a fault with them. I'm fairly knowledgeable about neurofeedback, and I know that messing with the wavelengths of your neocortex without knowing what you're doing can end up making it work improperly. It's best that you consult a licensed (and experienced) practitioner in the field before toying around with these. All though I don't know the details of the frequency that it responds to, I know that there is a delicate balance that must be held between all frequencies to make the mind work at optimum efficiency. Typically, when you even start your neurofeedback sessions, you have to get some big-shot neurologist to take a look at the initial scans (you'll be lucky to find it below a 1000 dollars). I know people who have received full neurofeedback/MRI treatment to get rid of ADD, and they ended up spending around 10k. If you're experienced at controlling all frequencies, or you have received neurofeedback before, there shouldn't be that much of a problem.
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So there's a training curve. You think people wouldn't spend a little time teaching the machine to read them so they could avoid manual labor? I know it didn't work so well with early speech recognition, but then, the payoff for finishing the training was less impressive.
As TFA notes, they've already had some success with using more targeted "mind reading" implants to enable full body paralysis patients to control wheelchairs, check e-mail, turn lights on and off, etc. By approaching this from two angles, one where they get full function, but are highly invasive, and another with limited function, but non-invasive, they may end up finding a happy medium.
Modern medicine (in the sense of heavily evidence based trials) has been moving at the same speed as computing. Don't write off this technology just because the initial steps are so small. The home PC was arguably introduced with Pong, this isn't so different.
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