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Mind reading machines

 
 
grant
17:03 / 07.04.05
This seems to be a real direction science is heading in lately, what with the monkey remote-controlling the robot arm and the paralysis patients moving computer cursors (as mentioned here) with the power of their minds. Not to mention the networked nervous system of "cyborg" Ken Warwick... or those biofeedback video games and similar mind-reading fun mentioned elsewhere on this site.

There's a new device written up in New Scientist today -- a kind of "microphone" that reads lips. Or rather, reads the neural impulses that create words. To oversimplify, it turns your thoughts into audible speech.

Check it out: DARPA, the US Department of Defense's research agency, is working on a project known as Advanced Speech Encoding, aimed at replacing microphones with non-acoustic sensors that detect speech via the speaker's nerve and muscle activity, rather than sound itself.

One system, being developed for DARPA by Rick Brown of Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts, relies on a sensor worn around the neck called a tuned electromagnetic resonator collar (TERC). Using sensing techniques developed for magnetic resonance imaging, the collar detects changes in capacitance caused by movement of the vocal cords, and is designed to allow speech to be heard above loud background noise.

DARPA is also pursuing an approach first developed at NASA's Ames lab, which involves placing electrodes called electromyographic sensors on the neck, to detect changes in impedance during speech. A neural network processes the data and identifies the pattern of words. The sensor can even detect subvocal or silent speech. The speech pattern is sent to a computerised voice generator that recreates the speaker's words.

DARPA envisages issuing the technology to soldiers on covert missions, crews in noisy vehicles or divers working underwater. But one day civilians might use a refined version to be heard over the din of a factory or engine room, or a loud bar or party. More importantly, perhaps, the technology would allow people to use phones in places such as train carriages, cinemas or libraries without disturbing others.



Say what?
 
 
paranoidwriter waves hello
23:47 / 19.04.05
Very interesting.... Thanks for the link.

I'm not a Technologist, but I remember once reading about how some patients who suffered from epilepsy were being treated successfully with a computer game. The point of the game was to make a small, animated boat (drifting right to left) settle in the centre of the screen. The computer was tuned into the patients' brain-waves (I think), and success at the game depended on focusing on the boat in a calm and relaxed manner, similar to meditation. As you might imagine, the process was deemed a success, and many patients said that by even imagining playing the game, they were better equipped to cope with/stave off their condition when it flared up.

Does this count?
 
  
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