Looks far more sensible than teleporting cruise missiles.The research could lead to a communication system that would benefit soldiers on the battlefield and paralysis and stroke patients, according to lead researcher Michael D’Zmura, chair of the UCI Department of Cognitive Sciences.
“Thanks to this generous grant we can work with experts in automatic speech recognition and in brain imaging at other universities to research a brain-computer interface with applications in military, medical and commercial settings,” D’Zmura says.
The brain-computer interface would use a noninvasive brain imaging technology like electroencephalography to let people communicate thoughts to each other. For example, a soldier would “think” a message to be transmitted and a computer-based speech recognition system would decode the EEG signals. The decoded thoughts, in essence translated brain waves, are transmitted using a system that points in the direction of the intended target.
“Such a system would require extensive training for anyone using it to send and receive messages,” D’Zmura says. “Initially, communication would be based on a limited set of words or phrases that are recognized by the system; it would involve more complex language and speech as the technology is developed further.”
D’Zmura will collaborate with UCI cognitive science professors Ramesh Srinivasan, Gregory Hickok and Kourosh Saberi. Joining the team are researchers Richard Stern and Vijayakumar Bhagavatula from Carnegie Mellon’s Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and David Poeppel from the University of Maryland’s Department of Linguistics.
The grant comes from the U.S. Department of Defense’s Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative program, which supports research involving more than one science and engineering discipline. Its goal is to develop applications for military and commercial uses.
Pentagon funds study of synthetic telepathy.
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Pentagon funds study of synthetic telepathy.
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Three Issues
1. Big Helmet
2. Brainwaves are faint, you need amplifiers which are still non-mobile at this point
3. Reading brainwaves is both processor and energy intensive.
Don't expect infantry, tanks and IFV's possibly, ships and airplanes most likely.
However calling it telepathy is misleading, your simply using nonverbal communication, you could be using frigging morse code with your eyebrows if you wish, it would not make it telepathy since we are not yet at the point we you can "think" blue and make the color blue appear.
OAN:Why do they always say Soldier? It's never a "soldier" it never will be.
1. Big Helmet
2. Brainwaves are faint, you need amplifiers which are still non-mobile at this point
3. Reading brainwaves is both processor and energy intensive.
Don't expect infantry, tanks and IFV's possibly, ships and airplanes most likely.
However calling it telepathy is misleading, your simply using nonverbal communication, you could be using frigging morse code with your eyebrows if you wish, it would not make it telepathy since we are not yet at the point we you can "think" blue and make the color blue appear.
OAN:Why do they always say Soldier? It's never a "soldier" it never will be.
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Hopefully this is a cover for a black ops project, like Stuart has suggested in the past. I wouldn't be too optimistic though.
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Exactly. I think this technology might be better applied in an attempt to close the man/machine lag and improve reaction times.Three Issues
1. Big Helmet
2. Brainwaves are faint, you need amplifiers which are still non-mobile at this point
3. Reading brainwaves is both processor and energy intensive.
Don't expect infantry, tanks and IFV's possibly, ships and airplanes most likely.
However calling it telepathy is misleading, your simply using nonverbal communication, you could be using frigging morse code with your eyebrows if you wish, it would not make it telepathy since we are not yet at the point we you can "think" blue and make the color blue appear.
Looks pretty far off at any rate.
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That's the country I want to live in, and it's well within our grasps as long as we stand up to be counted, fight the battles big and small, and realize that there is a light at the end of this tunnel. I look forward to seeing you all there on the other side.
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Hmmm... i don't know. There is a video game comming out at the end of the year by emotiv systems that is supposed to do this brainwaves enhancing stuff. It's clearly not nearly as complex as something that a language generator would require but it is also in the consumer price range, that is, 300 dollars. (Of course i'm still very sceptical about how good this emotiv systems thing is going to work.Mr Bean wrote:Three Issues
1. Big Helmet
2. Brainwaves are faint, you need amplifiers which are still non-mobile at this point
3. Reading brainwaves is both processor and energy intensive.
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Source? Quote? Link?salm wrote:
Hmmm... i don't know. There is a video game comming out at the end of the year by emotiv systems that is supposed to do this brainwaves enhancing stuff. It's clearly not nearly as complex as something that a language generator would require but it is also in the consumer price range, that is, 300 dollars. (Of course i'm still very sceptical about how good this emotiv systems thing is going to work.
It would be odd that a video game company managed to beat the folks over at MIT and Columbia who both have multi-million dollar grants to do nothing but study this and develop a device to let the disabled control computers. There was a device that claimed to be mind reading from
If it's the Emotiv, it's not in fact mind reading, and it's in fact more of an off-shoot of lie detecting hardware. It looks for physical changes, eyebrow raises, eye movement, crinkling of the brow and the like.
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Here´s a link to the company:Mr Bean wrote: Source? Quote? Link?
It would be odd that a video game company managed to beat the folks over at MIT and Columbia who both have multi-million dollar grants to do nothing but study this and develop a device to let the disabled control computers. There was a device that claimed to be mind reading from
If it's the Emotiv, it's not in fact mind reading, and it's in fact more of an off-shoot of lie detecting hardware. It looks for physical changes, eyebrow raises, eye movement, crinkling of the brow and the like.
Here's the wikipedia article
And here's a video to this years GDC:Wikipedia wrote: Conscious thoughts (Cognitiv suite): Imagining 12 kinds of movement (6 directions and 6 rotations), plus 1 other visualization ("disappear"), can be detected.
link
Actually these types of games have been around for a while only less complex. The first one i remember was a couple of years ago developed, i think, by some neurologist as an experiment. It was a stick figure standing on a rope. It would tip left or right and you had to think the direction in which it was not tipping in order to regain balance.