Scientists have discovered how to read 'the mind’s eye' using a computer that can replicate what humans are seeing or recalling by monitoring their brain activity.
Read »Scientists use computer to read "the mind's eye" on screen
Similar stories
- Electrocorticography (EcoG) Software Allows Typing With Brain Waves 2 years 7 weeks ago
- Person-to-person Communication Through Power Of Thought possible by Brain-Computer Interface 2 years 15 weeks ago
- Computer Scientists Deploy First Practical, Web-based, Secure, Verifiable Voting System 2 years 46 weeks ago
- Tomato Pills helps in preventing heart strokes says scientists 2 years 34 weeks ago
- Electrocorticography (EcoG) Software Allows Typing With Brain Waves 2 years 7 weeks ago
Scientists at Mayo Clinic campus in Jacksonville, Florida presented about typing of the brain waves in to alphanumeric characters on a computer screen by implanting electrodes directly on the brain instead of placing them on the scalp.
- Person-to-person Communication Through Power Of Thought possible by Brain-Computer Interface 2 years 15 weeks ago
Brain-Computer Interfacing (BCI) can be used for capturing brain signals and translating them into commands that allow humans to control (just by thinking) devices.
- Computer Scientists Deploy First Practical, Web-based, Secure, Verifiable Voting System 2 years 46 weeks ago
Computer scientists affiliated with the Center for Research on Computation and Society (CRCS), based at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), in collaboration with scientists at the Universit Catholique de Louvain (UCL) in Belgium, deployed the first practical, web-based implementation of a secure, verifiable voting system for the presidential election held at UCL earlier this week.
- Tomato Pills helps in preventing heart strokes says scientists 2 years 34 weeks ago
Scientists say a natural supplement made from tomatoes , taken daily, can stave off heart disease and strokes. Click on the link to read in detail.

- Scientists from Massachusetts Institute developed LCD screen that can recognize hand gestures 2 years 5 weeks ago
Scientists from Massachusetts Institute of Technology have developed an LCD screen, which can interpret the viewer's gestures in the 3-D. Viewers can control the on-screen objects by waving their arms in the air without touching the screen, let alone a mouse or keyboard, reports ANI.

- ‘Harry Read Me’ Might Be A Debated Issue Of Copenhagen Climate Conference 2 years 8 weeks ago
Climate researchers from different countries of the world are making their last minute preparations for the Copenhagen climate conference that is going to start in a few days. Though the scientists attending this conference will mostly focus on suggesting measures for checking greenhouse effects and carbon dioxide emissions, the reports published in the ‘Harry Read Me’ file will also get importance.
- Global warning can be controlled - Scientists 2 years 45 weeks ago
Amid all the forecasts and warnings of doom and disaster issued by climate scientists there is the hidden message that all is not yet lost.Ice sheets are melting and ocean acidity is rising, yet most scientists still believe that global warming can be controlled.
- Smallpox Vaccine to fight H5N1 Bird flu virus been Modified by the Scientists 2 years 47 weeks ago
A team of scientists from the University of Hong Kong and the US National Institutes of Health have developed a new vaccine strategy against the H5N1 bird flu virus by genetically modifying a smallpox vaccine.The new vaccine is potentially a sound solution in case of an H5N1 bird flu pandemic, which many scientists have been worried about, the study co-authored by scientists from the two sides said...Find more at
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Health--Science/Scientists-modify-sma...- Improved prognosis for patients with Metastatic Melanoma 2 years 45 weeks ago
Researchers have developed a new mouse model that allows them to replicate normal pigment cells at the earliest stages of conversion to malignant skin cancer in humans. After testing the mouse with a combination of two drug therapies, the team found the treatment caused a statistically significant regression in cancer cell development.The study was led by scientists at the University of California, San Francisco Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center and the University of Vermont College of Medicine.