homehome Home chatchat Notifications


The future of cell phones: dialing with your thoughts

Telephones became mobile phones, mobile phones became smartphones, and smartphones will become… mind phones ?! According to neuroscientists at the University of California, San Diego, that’s not very far away from us. How did they come to this conclusion ? Well… They had subjects sit in front of a screen displaying a keypad, with different […]

Mihai Andrei
April 20, 2011 @ 3:12 pm

share Share

Telephones became mobile phones, mobile phones became smartphones, and smartphones will become… mind phones ?! According to neuroscientists at the University of California, San Diego, that’s not very far away from us. How did they come to this conclusion ? Well…

They had subjects sit in front of a screen displaying a keypad, with different numbers, which flashed at slightly different frequencies. Special electrodes were attached to their heads, and they detected those frequencies, stored the information, and then trasmitted it on to mobile phones; in the end, they managed to make people dial a number using only their brains, which is ‘wow’ in my book. Still, since this is something that happens depending on brain activity, the question here is if anybody can do it,

From our experience, anyone can do it,” says researcher Tzzy-Ping Jung. But getting the system to work well “takes some practice, and some people are better at it than others,” says Mike Masnick.

Out of the 10 people asked to dial a 10 digit number – like any standard 0800 number –  7 of them had a one hundred percent accuracy, but Jung himself only had 85 percent accuracy.

“The device wouldn’t just be cool — it would also be a great advantage for people with disabilities,” says Marina Watson Peláez at Time. Other cellphone users could have “the ultimate hands-free experience,” or the system could be adapted “to detect when drivers or air-traffic controllers are getting drowsy by sensing lapses in concentration,” says Duncan Graham-Rowe at Technology Review.

 

If this were to hit the mainstream mobile phone market, it would definitely pose a remarkable feature! I mean, you would be dialing phone numbers using your brain! That seems just so James Bond-ish, it’s hard to believe it can really come true. But can it ? Could we see this technology on regular phones ? Of course, there will be a lot of obstacles, the biggest of which being the fact that it requires a large visual stimulus, and an average phone screen might just not be big enough. However, the technology will probably develop, and I’d bet my last beer that in only a few years, we are going to see this implemented in smartphones.

share Share

New research shows how Trump uses "strategic victimhood" to justify his politics

How victimhood rhetoric helped Donald Trump justify a sweeping global trade war

Long Before the Egyptians, The World's Oldest Mummies Were Smoked, Not Dried in the Desert

The 14,000-year-old smoked mummies in Southeast Asia are rewriting burial history

NASA Found Signs That Dwarf Planet Ceres May Have Once Supported Life

In its youth, the dwarf planet Ceres may have brewed a chemical banquet beneath its icy crust.

Scientists Quietly Developed a 6G Chip Capable of 100 Gbps Speeds

A single photonic chip for all future wireless communication.

We can still easily get AI to say all sorts of dangerous things

Jailbreaking an AI is still an easy task.

A small, portable test could revolutionize how we diagnose Alzheimer's

A passive EEG scan could spot memory loss before symptoms begin to show.

Scientists Solved a Key Mystery Regarding the Evolution of Life on Earth

A new study brings scientists closer to uncovering how life began on Earth.

Researchers Turned WiFi into a Medical Tool That Reads Your Pulse With Near Perfect Accuracy

Forget health trackers, the Wi-Fi in your living room may soon monitor your heartbeat.

Humans made wild animals smaller and domestic animals bigger. But not all of them

Why are goats and sheep so different?

Could AI and venom help us fight antibiotic resistance?

Scientists used AI to mine animal venom for potent new antibiotics.