Novel Brain-Machine-Interface allows you to Control and Steer a car
Scientists Steer Car With the Power of Thought Freie Universitaet Berlin (2011, February 21). Scientists steer car with the power of thought. ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 21, 2011, from http://www.sciencedaily.com /releases/2011/02/110218083711.htm Excerpt “The scientists from Freie Universität first used the sensors for measuring brain waves in such a way that a person can move a virtual … Read more
A Wireless Brain-Machine Interface for Real-Time Speech Synthesis
A Wireless Brain-Machine Interface for Real-Time Speech Synthesis Frank H. Guenther1,2*, Jonathan S. Brumberg1,3, E. Joseph Wright3, Alfonso Nieto-Castanon4, Jason A. Tourville1, Mikhail Panko1, Robert Law1, Steven A. Siebert3, Jess L. Bartels3, Dinal S. Andreasen3,5, Princewill Ehirim6, Hui Mao7, Philip R. Kennedy3 1 Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems and Sargent College of Health and … Read more
Brain–machine interface via real-time fMRI: Preliminary study on thought-controlled robotic arm (Radiology, Harvard)
Brain–machine interface via real-time fMRI: Preliminary study on thought-controlled robotic arm Jong-Hwan Leea, Jeongwon Ryub, Ferenc A. Jolesza, Zang-Hee Chob and Seung-Schik Yooa, Corresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author aDepartment of Radiology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA, USA bNeuroscience Research Institute, Gachon University of Medicine and … Read more

![speech synthesis Figure 1. Schematic of the brain-machine interface for real-time synthetic speech production. Black circles and curved arrows represent neurons and axonal projections, respectively, in the neural circuitry for speech motor output. The volunteer’s stroke-induced lesion in the efferent motor pathways (red X) disconnects motor plans represented in the cerebral cortex from the speech motoneurons, thus disabling speech output while sparing somatic, auditory, and visual sensation as well as speech motor planning centers in cerebral cortex. Signals collected from an electrode implanted in the subject’s speech motor cortex are amplified and sent wirelessly across the scalp as FM radio signals. The signals are then routed to an electrophysiology recording system for further amplification, analog-to-digital conversion, and spike sorting. The sorted spikes are sent to a Neural Decoder which translates them into commands for a Speech Synthesizer. Audio signals from the synthesizer are fed back to the subject in real time. [Abbreviation: PrCG = precentral gyrus.] doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0008218.g001](http://brainchemist.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/speech-synthesis.png?w=440&h=240&crop=1)





