EEG headsets also can give someone basic control over a computer program.
In the past,
EEG headsets have been used for everything from helping paralyzed people gain more autonomy to video games and meditation.
At each end, about 100 humans are hooked up to
EEG headsets that can read their brain activity.
With colleagues, Stefan Haufe from the Berlin Institute of Technology wired 18 volunteers to
an EEG headset and asked them to drive at 100 km / h in a car simulator, closely following the car in front.
With colleagues, he wired 18 volunteers to
an EEG headset, a non-invasive way to measure brain activity, and asked them to drive...
But it's also
an EEG headset, a somewhat less frivolous one than the games described above.
Just last week I was looking at the Emotiv
EEG headset (me want!)
This EEG headset from Belgian research center Imec can assess your emotional state based on signals from the front of your brain.
Not exact matches
For instance, a company called NeuroSky has a number of
headset products it says use
EEG readings for educational and recreational uses.
Gamers weren't going to wear a gooey bathing cap, so the team came up with a rigid, relatively unobtrusive, even cool - looking
headset able to get an accurate brain - wave reading with 16 gel - free sensors instead of the 128 sticky ones in a standard
EEG cap.
The paralyzed person inside will be wearing an electroencephalographic (
EEG)
headset that records brainwave activity.
That's the conclusion of a new study that logged the neural activity of 12 high school students and their teacher with electroencephalography (
EEG)
headsets over 11 classes.
Brainwave - reading
headsets that monitor electroencephalograph (
EEG) signals are well established and offer one way of capturing emotional feedback.
Streamlining the neuro -
headset, which Le describes as a «high - fidelity
EEG - acquisition device,» was another obstacle that involved «loads» of sensors collecting as much data as possible to pinpoint informative spots around the skull where brain activity best revealed a person's thoughts and emotions.
These products are crude, imprecise and sometimes frustratingly nonresponsive — that's how it goes with
EEG - based
headsets, which pick up only the faintest electroencephalographic echoes of neural activity through the skull.
(The Mindset founders referred me to Berka's paper on
EEG as some of the science underpinning the
headset.)
These
headsets sense the electrical activity inside a person's brain using a technique known as electroencephalography, or
EEG.