Opening a car door or turning up the heating at home could become
just a wish away with Honda's new technology that connects thoughts
inside your brain with a robot.
The Japanese company has
developed a way to read patterns of electric currents on a person's
scalp as well as changes in cerebral blood flow when a person thinks
about four simple movements - moving the right hand, moving the left
hand, running and eating.
A Honda employee uses his thoughts to ask the Asimo robot to wave
Honda succeeded in analyzing such thought patterns, and then relaying
them as wireless commands for Asimo, its human-shaped robot.
In
a video shown at Tokyo headquarters, a person wearing a helmet sat
still but thought about moving his left hand - a thought that was picked
up by cords attached to his head inside the helmet. After several
seconds, Asimo, programmed to respond to brain signals, lifted its left
arm.
Honda said the technology wasn't quite ready for a live
demonstration because of possible distractions in the person's
thinking.
Brainwave: Honda said they would need to make the reading device smaller if it were to become a portable device
Another problem is that brain patterns differ greatly among
individuals, and so about two to three hours of studying them in advance
are needed for the technology to work.
The company, a leader in robotics, acknowledged the technology
was still at a basic research stage with no immediate practical
applications in the works.
'I'm talking about dreams today,' said Yasuhisa Arai, executive at the Honda Research Institute.
'I'm talking about dreams today,' said Yasuhisa Arai, executive at the Honda Research Institute.
'Practical uses are still way into the future.'
The robot performs one of its four movements
Japan boasts one of the leading robotics industries in the world, and
the government is pushing to develop the industry as a road to growth.
Research
on the brain is being tackled around the world, but Honda said its
research was among the most advanced in figuring out a way to read brain
patterns without having to hurt the person, such as embedding sensors
into the skin.
Honda has made robotics a centerpiece of its
image, sending Asimo to events and starring the walking, talking robot
in TV ads. Among the challenges for the brain technology is to make the
reading-device smaller so it can be portable.
Arai didn't rule out the possibility of a car that may some day drive itself - even without a steering wheel.
'Our products are for people to use. It is important for us to understand human behavior,' he said.
We think this is the ultimate in making machines move.
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