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A new neurostimulator works like a pacemaker for the brain monitoring the brain s electrical activity and delivering electrical stimulation

In the future we aim to incorporate learning into our closed-loop platform to build intelligent devices that can figure out how to best treat you

The brainternt project: Scientists create wireless implants that could let users control computes and smart devices with their MINDS

The human brain could soon have broadband thanks to new neural implants that bring WIFI to the brain, letting people wirelessly communicate with computers.

The Next Incarnation Of EDA

The Next Incarnation Of EDA
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This device can recognise hand gestures using wearable biosensors

This device can recognise hand gestures using wearable biosensors Updated: Updated: December 30, 2020 11:07 IST The algorithm has been taught to recognise 21 unique hand gestures, including thumbs-up, fist, flat hand, holding up individual fingers and counting numbers. Share Article This device can recognise hand gestures using wearable biosensors. | Picture by special arrangement.   The algorithm has been taught to recognise 21 unique hand gestures, including thumbs-up, fist, flat hand, holding up individual fingers and counting numbers. (Subscribe to our Today s Cache newsletter for a quick snapshot of top 5 tech stories. Click here to subscribe for free.) A new device uses wearable biosensors and artificial intelligence (AI) to recognise hand gestures from electrical signals in the forearm.

New Device Detects Which Hand Gesture You Want to Make

New Device Detects Which Hand Gesture You Want to Make Imagine typing on a computer without a keyboard, playing a video game without a controller or driving a car without a wheel. That’s one of the goals of a new device developed by engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, that can recognize hand gestures based on electrical signals detected in the forearm. The system, which couples wearable biosensors with artificial intelligence (AI), could one day be used to control prosthetics or to interact with almost any type of electronic device. “Prosthetics are one important application of this technology, but besides that, it also offers a very intuitive way of communicating with computers.” said Ali Moin, who helped design the device as a doctoral student in UC Berkeley’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences. “Reading hand gestures is one way of improving human-computer inter

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