The 3D-printed helmet that can read your mind. Could it change the world?

If the farthest frontier of human exploration is outer space, the closest one is inside our skulls. And OpenBCI–that’s short for brain-computer interface–is your headspace sherpa.

Founded by Conor Russomanno and Joel Murphy, OpenBCI developed an open-source interface for translating brain, muscle, and heart activity. With their device, you can not only see what’s happening inside your head and your heart, you can then use that activity to influence the rest of the world outside your body.

10 years from now, we will be a different species. We will still be humans, but we’ll be different humans than we are today. – Conor Russomanno

The potential applications for BCI are huge. Already, the technology has been used to play video games hands-free, control bionic tech, and assess whether comatose patients who can’t move their bodies are nevertheless experiencing conscious thoughts.

In the near future, BCI could vastly enhance our ability to understand technology–and ourselves.

Related
Have we got the brain all wrong? Study shows its shape is more important than its wiring
Neural activity may be more influenced by the shape of the brain – its grooves, contours, and folds – than by its complex interconnections.
Flexible brain implant tested in people for the first time
Startup Precision Neuroscience has tested its flexible, ultra-thin brain implants in people for the first time.
Brain scans hint that lonely individuals process the world differently
A study finds that the brains of people who score higher in loneliness react in unique ways when viewing video content.
The neurons that make us feel hangry
Researchers gave pinpointed a cluster of cells called AgRP neurons near the underside of the brain that may create “hangry” feelings.
Up Next
No related content in the preview
Exit mobile version