Tag: BCI

Brain Interface Lab

I recently founded the Brain Interface Lab with some colleagues from Parsons MFA Design & Technology and Columbia University. The lab is dedicated to supporting the open-source software and hardware development of brain-computer interfaces. Check out our website and all of the awesome stuff that was created during our first big event titled Hack-A-Brain:

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Please Vote For An Awesome EEG Project!

Please take 10 seconds to vote for my New Challenge application: Despite being rather silent on this blog recently, I’ve actually been quite busy. My ongoing thesis at Parsons MFA Design & Technology is an exploration of practical applications of wearable brain-computer interfaces. More on that to come. Recently, some fellow designers, engineers, researchers, and […]

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Not So New News!

Just found out that my friend Jeremy and I made it into the New School newspaper last May, after being asked what our plans were for the summer! It’s amusing to compare a prior perception of a future level of achievement to an ex post facto critique on the same success state. The “graphic novel” […]

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Interactive Android Application for EEG Biofeedback

//–The Code Is On Github!–// [vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/41776885 w=500&h=281] ABSTRACT This post details the research and development of a mobile application which receives and annotates neurofeedback data from a commercial electroencephalography (EEG) device with a single dry electrode. The system is designed to convert any Android mobile phone into a portable storage device that passively records […]

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Check out the post that I made below to read about my ideas of syncing personal EEG feedback with the masses via a smartphone application. http://interaction2012.coin-operated.com/?p=547

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Project Notes (EEG to Mobile App)

Notes on my ongoing EEG project (with semester plan):

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Preliminary EEG Research (and Brain Cap v1.0)

Introduction This posts details my first attempt at building a Brain Computer Interface (BCI), as well as, some of the research I did along the way.  There are a number of methods of retrieving neurofeedback from the brain, but Electroencephalography (EEG) is the least invasive of the known methods.  Other methods, despite producing cleaner and more localized […]

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