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June 29, 2009 4:13 PM PDT

Toyota thinks up mind-reading wheelchair

by Sharon Vaknin
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(Credit: PopSci.com)

Last week, we told you about Mindflex, a Mattel toy that lets players move objects with their brains. This week comes word that the same technology is making its way into a more functional application--a wheelchair that users can maneuver with thought alone.

Toyota has developed the wheelchair in collaboration with researchers in Japan. The system analyzes brain wave data using signal-processing technology and delivers neuro-feedback to the driver.

Brain wave-detecting technology, or electroencephalography (EEG), isn't new. In layman's terms, a device, usually a cap wired with sensors, detects a person's brain waves. That information is analyzed by a computer and applied to the device in question. Scientists have pursued the technology for decades, but have had difficulty achieving short response times, explains the Associated Press.

Toyota's mind-controlled wheelchair, however, has what appears to be the quickest response time yet: 125 milliseconds, or 125 thousandths of a second. The user can almost instantly steer right, left, and forward. To stop, the person in the chair must puff up a cheek, a motion that's then detected by the headpiece.

Because of this quick response time, plans are under way to turn the wheelchair into a commercial health care product. The most practical use would be for rehabilitation patients who have been paralyzed, suffered a stroke, or have other conditions that hinder their muscle control. So far, the research has centered on brain waves related to imaginary hand and foot control. However, Toyota hopes the system could ultimately be applied to brain waves generated by emotions.

EEG technology has been applied in areas of research beyond health care and gaming. Honda, for example, is working on a mind-controlled robot. And Lawrence Farwell, chief scientist and founder of the Seattle-based Brain Fingerprinting Laboratories, has developed a technology he says is more accurate than the traditional lie detector.

The technology is best used as evidence in criminal cases. According to ABC News, subjects are presented with facts, stories, images, or questions related to the crime they're being accused of. If the subject recognizes a word or picture, the brain releases an involuntary response that supposedly confirms that the subject was present during the scene of the crime.

Research for the mind-reading technology has been funded and used by the U.S. government in recent years. In 2003, a man convicted of murder in Iowa was released from jail, as the technology confirmed that he was not present for the crime, ABC News reports.

Sharon Vaknin is the CNET Labs' go-to intern. When she's not testing MP3 players, blogging, or making the lab look presentable, she can be found playing computer games. Sharon formerly worked for Best Buy and is currently studying journalism at San Francisco State University. E-mail Sharon.
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by TogetherinParis June 29, 2009 7:14 PM PDT
Now a computer generated language that quickly describes the road ahead for blind people.
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by eric92park June 29, 2009 8:29 PM PDT
Its more like they are the first to experiment this rather than "Thinks Up" because ideas are always there people are just waiting for old technology to die down a bit.
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by June 30, 2009 2:18 AM PDT
Every few years someone tries this, one day the technology will be good enough. In the mean time disabled people make a nice soft target for the experiments and there are sources of funding.

15 years ago, it was speech controlled wheelchairs, not match become of them.
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by dascha1 June 30, 2009 4:49 AM PDT
Although I can't detect ears this person does appear to still have a mouth. Is that useful in this experiment or an option?
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by jennydrea August 7, 2009 2:10 AM PDT
I am here to share some good thoughts for you guys. I know this really can help. This is about choices for healing - body, mind, spirit.
Create Your Health (CYH) is designed to inspire and give you choices regarding improving your life ? physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Each episode will introduce you to a particular therapeutic tradition and demonstrate what a treatment within that practice is like. Check out their website http://createyourhealth.com and discover several alternative health practices and take charge of your life to be able to live pain free again - no drugs and no surgeries.
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