UTS-developed Mind Switch technology, which allows people to operate
electrical equipment with the blink of an eye, is being showcased at
London’s Science Museum.
Professor Ashley Craig, Associate Professor Les Kirkup and Dr Yvonne
Tran from the Faculty of Science are in London to demonstrate the Mind
Switch as part of the museum’s Brain Awareness Week activities.
Professor Craig said the London invitation was a special honour for the
UTS researchers and indicated the international recognition the Mind
Switch work has achieved.
The Mind Switch allows people to activate and control electrical devices
simply by closing their eyes. The key is a burst of alpha brainwaves
emitted as the eyes are closed, which the UTS researchers found could be
distinguished from other brain activity and isolated.
The UTS researchers, who are working towards commercialisation of the
technology, have recently completed successful trials of the Mind Switch
with 10 severely disabled people.
Professor Craig said the latest prototype of the Mind Switch
Environmental Control Unit, or ECU, had been 90 per cent reliable in the
trials, which were conducted in the homes of people who have suffered
quadriplegia through accident or disease.
"We asked participants to use the ECU to control their television: turn
it on and off, change channels and adjust the volume," Professor Craig
said. "Most could activate the switch in one to three seconds more than
90 per cent of the time."
|