Advertisement

Coming Soon: Wheelchairs Controlled By Tongues, Brain Waves

Discover how the sip and puff device empowers wheelchair users and the innovative tongue control technology being tested.

Google NewsGoogle News Preferred Source

Newsletter

Sign up for our email newsletter for the latest science news

Sign Up

Right now one of the most common ways quadriplegics move wheelchairs is through a sip and puff device, in which the person sucks or blows through a straw. But Georgia Tech University scientists are testing a headset that will allow wheelchair users to drive their chairs using only their tongues. New Scientist reports:

Advertisement

The device works by using two sensors to track a 5-millimetre-wide magnet attached to the tip of the user's tongue. The sensors—embedded in a wireless headset—read the fluctuations in the strength of the magnetic field as the tongue moves and transmit the signals on to a computer, where they are interpreted and acted upon.

Of course, who needs a tongue when you can just think the wheelchair into action. Japanese researchers claim they’ve created a device that allows brain waves to control a wheelchair. The research team claims that the device needs only 125 milliseconds to register the user's thoughts on the chair's display panel. The wheelchair uses a blind single-separation and space-time-frequency filtering technology to translate what a person is thinking, and can work so fast that the person doesn’t notice a time delay. Over time, the researchers state, the system can even learn a person’s tendencies and begin to anticipate their next move. Related Content: DISCOVER: Inside The World Of Stephen Hawking 80beats: Brain Scans Predict When You'll Screw Up 80beats: Mind-Controlled Video Game

Image: flickr/ PsicoCafe

Stay Curious

JoinOur List

Sign up for our weekly science updates

View our Privacy Policy

SubscribeTo The Magazine

Save up to 40% off the cover price when you subscribe to Discover magazine.

Subscribe
Advertisement

1 Free Article