Showing posts with label mind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mind. Show all posts

2011-01-03

Cambridge Emotional Computer: Mind Reading GPS System



The 'emotionally sensitive' satnav: Cambridge scientist develops device that reacts to driver's moods


Professor Peter Robinson has created a satnav that recognises facial expressions and voice tone and can react based on the situation. The prototype feeds this data into software attached to a robotic human head that sits next to the driver

His device uses sensors to detect facial expressions, such as frowns, and voice recognition software to pick up rising irritation in the tone of a driver’s voice.

The prototype feeds this information into software attached to a robotic human head that sits alongside the driver.

When it detects a driver’s anger, it responds with sympathetic expressions.


The emotional computer

[...]
When people talk to each other, they express their feelings through facial expressions, tone of voice and body postures. They even do this when they are interacting with machines. These hidden signals are an important part of human communication, but computers ignore them.

Professor Peter Robinson is leading a team in the Computer Laboratory at the University of Cambridge who are exploring the role of emotions in human-computer interaction. His research is examined in the film The Emotional Computer, released on the University's YouTube channel (http://www.youtube.com/cambridgeuniversity).
Collected from: The emotional computer




Computer Laboratory: Emotionally intelligent interfaces

With the quick advances in key computing technologies and the heightened user expectation of computers, the development of socially and emotionally adept technologies is becoming a necessity. This project is investigating the inference of people's mental states from facial expressions, vocal nuances, body posture and gesture, and other physiological signals, and also considering the expression of emotions by robots and cartoon avatars.
[...]

Further information


Facial affect inference


Analysing a discouraging expression


Mind-reading machines

Processing stages in the mind-reading system


Body movement analysis

Body movement analysis


Vocal affect inference

Recording multi-modal cues for HCI


Affective robotics

Robot Charles, making various facial expressions


Learning and emotions

Automatic inference of affect


In the future, computers will be emotional - SmartPlanet


More Human, Less Machine
Would it help if the GPS system looked a little more like a person than a box? Robinson thinks people would respond to the machine better if it did look more human-like. The professor designed the almost-human-like robot named Charles.

Charles has motors in his face and cameras in his eyes. While he might be more friendly than a standard GPS system, he also looks a bit more creepy.

The Cambridge professor thinks differently: “The way that Charles and I can communicate shows us the future of how people are going to interact with machines.”

Robinson turns to Charles in the car. “Hey Charles, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship,” he said.

2009-11-04

Mind-reading computer

clipped from www.guardian.co.uk
guardian.co.uk home

Scary or sensational? A machine that can look into the mind

MRI scans tops

Scientists have developed a computerised mind-reading technique which lets them accurately predict the images that people are looking at by using scanners to study brain activity.

clipped from www.dailymail.co.uk
Mail Online

Psychic 'mind-reading' computer will show your thoughts on screen

The device studies patterns of brainwave activity and turns them into a moving image on a computer screen.

mind reading machine.jpg
clipped from www.foxnews.com
FOX News.com

Computer Uses Brain Scans to Read Minds

Associate professor of psychology Jack Gallant and two researchers, Kendrick Kay and Thomas Naselaris, first trained a computer program to recognize which of a set of 1,750 photos Kay and Naselaris were looking at while their brains were scanned by an MRI machine of the sort ordinarily used in hospitals.

Jack Gallant
Professor (Psychology)
Research areas: Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience

The goal of the Gallant Lab is to understand the structure and function of the human visual system at a quantitative, computational level, and to build models that accurately predict how the brain will respond during natural vision. Predictive models of brain activity are the gold standard of computational neuroscience, and are critical for the long-term advancement of neuroscience and medicine.


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Sources:
  1. Scary or sensational? A machine that can look into the mind | Science | The Guardian
  2. Psychic computer that could plug into brain and show thoughts on screen is developed | Mail Online
  3. Computer Uses Brain Scans to Read Minds - Science News | Science & Technology | Technology News - FOXNews.com
  4. Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute and Neuroscience Graduate Degree Program - Profile
Related:
  1. Psychic computer shows your thoughts on screen - Times Online
  2. Mind-reading computer picks your card › News in Science (ABC Science)
  3. Brain scanners can tell what you're thinking about - life - 28 October 2009 - New Scientist
  4. Mind Reading with fMRI: Tong, Gallant et al. from Brain Physiology, Cognition and Consciousness discussion board on Nature Network

2008-12-12

Mind Reading Software

clipped from www.cns.atr.jp
clipped from www.medgadget.com

fMRI Extracts Images From The Brain

Researchers from ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories in Japan used a functional MRI machine on the brain to read the letters and symbols that the eyes of a subject were seeing.
clipped from www.telegraph.co.uk

Scientists develop software that can map dreams

The research investigated how electrical signals are captured and reconstructed into images - Scientists develop software that can map dreams

'Mind-reading' software could record your dreams

Brain scanning can now extract information directly from the brain: the subject read the word

Brain scanning can now extract information directly from the brain: the subject read the word "neuron" at the top, and software working with the brain scan images reconstructed the word (below) (Image: Neuron/Cell Press)

clipped from www.cns.atr.jp
Associate Professor
Yukiyasu Kamitani

We develop the decoding techniques reading the states of mind by non-invasive brain imaging, fMRI or MEG. Especially, we aim to reveal subjective perceptual and cognitive contents.


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Related:
fMRI Extracts Images From The Brain - Medgadget - www.medgadget.com
Scientists develop software that can map dreams - Telegraph
'Mind-reading' software could record your dreams - tech - 12 December 2008 - New Scientist
ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratories
Computational Neuroscience Lab.
Yukiyasu Kamitani
Brain Image Reproduction « Tjanderson’s Weblog
Scientists extract images directly from brain ::: Pink Tentacle

2008-04-18

Emotiv's new brain-computer interface

Emotiv Systems recently unveiled a brain/computer interface system with a helmet and software applications. The Project Epoc system can move objects based on a gamer's thoughts, reflect facial expressions, and respond to the excitement or calm the gamer mentally exerts.

Brain controlled computer games

Below is a video discussing and demonstrating Emotiv's new brain interface.
clipped from www.sciam.com

Emotiv Systems introduces a sensor-laden headset that interprets gamers' intentions, emotions and facial expressions

EPOC GAMING HEADSET: Emotiv's $299 EPOC headset (with 14 sensors) will enable gamers to use their own brain activity to interact with the virtual worlds where they play.
Courtesy of Emotiv Systems


The EPOC detects brain activity noninvasively using electroencephalography (EEG), a measure of brain waves, via external sensors along the scalp that pick up the electrical bustle in various parts of the furrowed surface of the brain's cortex, a region that handles higher order thoughts.
clipped from www.emotiv.com
Emotiv Systems
clipped from www.emotiv.com
PRODUCTS

Overview
Emotiv EPOC™
Technology
Reserve your Emotiv EPOC™
Definitions
clipped from www.emotiv.com
DEVELOPERS

Overview
Detection Suites
Software Development Kit
Download SDKLite

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Related:
Tomorrow's Trends: Brain controlled computer games
Head Games: Video Controller Taps into Brain Waves: Scientific American
GDC 07: Project Epoc brings mind control to games - News at GameSpot
Emotiv Home

2008-04-08

Mind Control

Mind control (or "brainwashing") refers to a broad range of psychological tactics able to subvert an individual's control of his own thinking, behavior, emotions, or decisions. The concept is closely related to hypnosis, but differs in practical approach.
There are a number of controversial issues regarding mind control and the methods by which control might be attained. Some are discusse in the next videos.


get your vodpod

Related:
Mind control - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
INFORMATION AND VIDEO CONCERNING MIND CONTROL

2008-03-09

A mind reading machine


Brain Scans Let Computer 'Read' Visual Activity

Scientists have developed a computerized mind-reading technique which lets them accurately predict the images that people are looking at by using scanners to study brain activity.

The process relies on functional MRI to scan the brain for activity information related to the viewing of a chosen set of images. A computer database of brain activity-image links is then created, so that future viewings can be deduced based solely on an analysis of fresh fMRI patterns.

"We're not mind-reading," explained study co-author Jack L. Gallant, an associate professor in the department of psychology at the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute at the University of California, Berkeley. "We're not reconstructing images of what people see or think. We can't do that yet, although it should be possible in principle."

via: The Reference Frame: Jack Gallant: reading your mind
related:
Functional magnetic resonance imaging - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Your Brain and Yourself | Perspectives on Our Golden Age of Neuroscience

2008-03-08

MoMA's Elastic Mind show

Design and the Elastic Mind: an exhibition about the intersection of art and design with science and technology.
clipped from www.moma.org

Design and the Elastic Mind
February 24–May 12, 2008

In the past few decades, individuals have experienced dramatic changes in some of the most established dimensions of human life: time, space, matter, and individuality.
Design and the Elastic Mind is a survey of the latest developments in the field. It focuses on designers' ability to grasp momentous changes in technology, science, and social mores,
clipped from dvice.com
Bring loved ones back — as fuel cells!
fuelcellcoffin.jpg
Nonstop Shoes keep working when you stop walking
energyshoes.jpg
Lightweeds are interactive 'shadowplants'
lightweeds.jpg
A vase made by bees
honeycombvase.jpg
1. Are you terminally ill? Ask a bee
beesovulation.jpg

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Related:
DVICE: Brain-stretching design: The 10 best items from MoMA's Elastic Mind show
MoMA.org | Exhibitions | 2008 | Design and the Elastic Mind
Design and the Elastic Mind
brendandawes.com » Design and the Elastic Mind
Design and the Elastic Mind