brain port

Latest

  • The Brain Port, neural tongue interface of the future

    by 
    Ryan Block
    Ryan Block
    04.25.2006

    Seems like every distant vision of the future has man jacking into his gear via some crazy head gear or a plug on the back of the neck or head. We just take it for granted that yeah, that's the fastest way to get to the brain: through the stem or straight into the cortex. Well, think again, because the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition's 30-year neural interface project is yielding fruit -- the kind you can taste. Their Brain Port machine / sensory interface uses 144 microelectrodes to transmit information through sensitive nerve fibers in your lingua, enabling devices to supplement your own sensory perception. The system, which is getting shown off to Navy and Marine Corps divers next month will supposedly have sonar integration for sub-aqueous orientation, but has already apparently given some landlubber blind people the ability to catch balls, "notice" others walking in front of them, and find doors. With IR, radar, sonar, and other forms of detection, the researchers believe this device will obsolete night vision -- even our own eyes -- sooner than later.

  • A "taste" of the future of gaming

    by 
    Ross Miller
    Ross Miller
    04.25.2006

    Here is yet another excuse to use the phrase "science fiction becoming reality." Researchers at the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition are working hard on a device that will give humans extrasensory perception by attaching electrodes to the tongue. The device, known as "Brain Port," is a narrow strip of red plastic containing 144 microelectrodes, which transmits information from the tongue to the brain through connecting nerve fibers. The technology has been found effective in giving people an internal sonar -- one example of the device in action cited blind people who could "find doorways, notice people walking in front of them and [catching] balls." The article mentions the uses in military (soldiers with an internal sonar to aid with night-time and underwater situations) and underwater crime scene investigation -- there is even a commercially marketed version of the device coming soon. But how could this apply to gaming? As an extension to a first-person shooter, might we replace the on-screen radar with a wired stick of gum that lets our minds know when a bad guy is creeping up behind us? Could we use a device like this for personal headphones? How would you envision this technology becoming applicable in the world of gaming? If the "Brain Port" becomes commercially viable, expect Apple to release the iTongue sometime in 2008 -- sorry, we can't help but be a little tongue-in-cheek.