Eight healthy human subjects completed the experimental sessions of the study
wearing the EEG cap.
They then returned to the lab to play the game
wearing the EEG sensors again.
Over in the corner of the lab, Thomas Hoellinger of the Free University of Brussels (ULB) in Belgium is
wearing an EEG cap, which measures electrical activity at various points across his scalp.
A person
wearing an EEG cap that measures brain activity was then instructed either to do mental calculations, or rest.
Brown postdoctoral researcher James Cavanagh led the research in which he recruited 34 people to play a custom - designed computer game while
wearing EEG scalp monitors.
Seated and
wearing an EEG cap to read his brainwaves, the participant trained to control an avatar in a virtual reality environment.
A man
wearing an EEG cap that measures brain activity triggered exposure to these fluorescent drugs simply by doing calculations in his head (PLoS, doi.org/bpwp).
Again, both the babies and the researcher
wore EEG caps to record their brain activity.
Project leader Rajesh Rao
wore an EEG cap while playing a video game.
To demonstrate the Expressiv application, researcher Marco Della Torre
wore an EEG helmet with electrodes placed in various spots on his head.
Not exact matches
Right now, that means
wearing a cap on your head that's covered in
EEG - monitoring electrodes, according to the MIT Technology Review.
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.
The team examined the brainwave patterns of 36 infants (17 in the first experiment and 19 in the second) using electroencephalography (
EEG), which measures patterns of brain electrical activity via electrodes in a skull cap
worn by the participants.
The babies listened to a series of language sounds while
wearing an electroencephalography (
EEG) cap to measure their brain activity.
Electrical and computer engineering Professor Barry Van Veen
wears an electrode net used to monitor brain activity via
EEG signals.
As part of the experiment, eight volunteers aged 65 and over (from a wider sample of 95 people aged 65 and over)
wore a mobile
EEG head - set which recorded their brain activity when walking between busy and green urban spaces.
In one VA - funded study, he is using a type of electroencephalography (
EEG)-- in which veterans
wear an electrode - studded cap on their head — to trace brain patterns that may eventually serve as biomarkers.
The team envisions a person
wearing a small, hearing aid - like
EEG device to monitor brain activity and detect when drugs are needed — for example, when a person with ADHD's concentration begins to lapse.
University of Washington graduate student Jose Ceballos
wears an electroencephalography (
EEG) cap that records brain activity and sends a response to a second participant over the Internet.
Here's how it works: The first participant, or «respondent,»
wears a cap connected to an electroencephalography (
EEG) machine that records electrical brain activity.
Participants rode stationary bikes while
wearing a wireless heart rate monitor and an
EEG cap.
Each of them
wore a wireless heart rate monitor and an
EEG (electroencephalogram) cap containing 64 scalp electrodes.