The Times Online reports that the next leap in computer and video game technology is thought-control:
Satoru Iwata, the president and chief executive of Nintendo – which is expected to sell about 25million units of its successful Wii video games console this financial year – has no doubts about the next gaming boom. “As soon as we think something in our brain, it will appear within a video game,” he told The Times in an exclusive interview.
“You’ll probably need to wear some kind of hat or helmet or something…”
…As far-fetched as it sounds, Mr Iwata’s claim – which brings to mind the plot of Craig Thomas’s bestselling 1977 novel Firefox, about a mind-reading Soviet fighter aircraft – is already coming true: the world’s first thought-controlled game is expected to be launched by the Sydney company Emotiv by the end of this year.
Co-founded by Allan Snyder, a neuroscientist and former University of Cambridge research fellow, Emotiv says its EPOC headset features 16 sensors that push against the player’s scalp to measure electrical activity in the brain – a process known as electro-encephalography. In theory, this allows the player to spin, push, pull, and lift objects on a computer monitor, simply by thinking.
Despite widespread scepticism, pre-release tests have suggested that the technology works. “This is the tip of the iceberg for what is possible,” said Tan Le, another of Emotiv’s co-founders, during a recent press demonstration. “There will be a convergence of gesture-based technology and the brain as a new interface – the Holy Grail is the mind.”
RESOURCE/SOURCE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/07/17/thought-controlled-comput_n_113476.html on Thursday, July 17, 2008.