Download the Tom's Hardware App from the App Store
The reference for current tech news
Yes No

Intel Making Computers That Will Read Your Mind

by - source: Tom's Hardware US

Those if you with dirty minds should probably open the private browsing window first.

While Intel is still concentrating on making chips that'll continue to push the performance limits of our desktops and laptops, there are researchers at the chip company looking at the next step ahead – reading our minds.

Dean Pomerleau, a senior researcher at Intel Laboratories, is part of a team developing a computer that's able to 'read' the human brain of what word it is thinking about.

"The computer uses a form of 20 questions to narrow down what the word is," Pomerleau explained to the Telegraph. "So a noun with a physical property such as spade, which you dig with, produces activity in the motor cortex of the brain, as this is the area that controls physical movements. A food related word like apple, however, produces activity in those parts of the brain related to hunger. So the computer can infer attributes to each word being thought about and this lets the computer zero down on what the word is pretty quickly."

Intel hopes that this will eventually lead to people being able to write emails and perform web searches just by thinking.

While we're still lusting after the best laser mice and mechanical keyboards, Intel's CTO Justin Ratner said, "Mind reading is the ultimate user interface. There will be concerns about privacy with this sort of thing and we will have to overcome them. What is clear though is that humans are not restricted any more to just using keyboards and mice."

Share:
4
Comments
X
Submit

Comments
Add your comment
Silmarunya 27/08/2010 15:46
Hide
-1+

Won't happen anytime soon. You'd need to have a comprehensive 'vocabulary' of words and their associated thoughts. Languages have thousands of words, how can they ever interprete all of them?

And what with abstract concepts? A spade is a physical concept and should work, but try doing that with 'infinite' or 'higher demension'.

Oh, and how are they going to account for the diversity in how brains work? Between regular people, but especially between, say, a regular person and an autist?

darksai 27/08/2010 16:11
Hide
-0+

Not to mention pure matters of perception. Consider a spoon or fork, that could be thought of as mechanical and hunger related, depending on how the person thinks at the time. Trying to "read" the brain with lit up parts is like trying to study ecosystems with an orbital telescope. Just shows much $ intel have to throw around.

Silmarunya 27/08/2010 16:12
Hide
-0+

darksai :
Not to mention pure matters of perception. Consider a spoon or fork, that could be thought of as mechanical and hunger related, depending on how the person thinks at the time. Trying to "read" the brain with lit up parts is like trying to study ecosystems with an orbital telescope. Just shows much $ intel have to throw around.



You can't blame them for doing this sort of research. It's unlikely it will achieve its goal, but a huge amount of important discoveries and developments originated from research that never achieved its initial purpose or was even downright stupid.

maxpayne94 31/08/2010 12:41
Hide
-0+

One day they will control our mind using the computer.

Best offers

Newsletters


OK