Nice article: but watch out: Math ahead !!
read this first : pattern recognition tutorial
A blog dedicated to recent developments in psychophysiology and clinical applications of ERP in neuropsychiatry. Ghent University Institute for Systems learning and Applied Neurophysiology.
29 november 2007
Combining Classifiers
Nice article: but watch out: Math ahead !!
read this first : pattern recognition tutorial
ICA and GABA to keep You awake !
Explore this website by Mr. German Gomez-Herrero if You are interested in ICA , brain synchrony and EEGLab. Enjoy his (G) ABA synchrony
26 november 2007
Exosceleton
Coffee anybody ?
Many researchers around the world have tried to build robotic devices able to help people with paralysis. Now, European researchers have developed a robot control system based on electroencephalogram (EEG). The patients using the Brain2Robot system might regain some of their lost autonomy. The users will control the robotic arm with their thoughts. To control the robotic arm, the Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) developed at one Fraunhofer Institute in Germany is combined with an eye tracker. The signals are sent to a computer which performs the main learning task. According to the researchers, the robotic arm could become commercially available in a few years. |
22 november 2007
Chips growing axons ?
21 november 2007
Brain Imaging Conference
20 november 2007
19 november 2007
A new dimension in Neuronavigation: Visor (ANT)
Neuroanatomy course
2nd - 4th April 2008
Institute of Child Health, London WC1
Course director: Dr Paul Johns BSc BM MSc
(Specialist Registrar, Institute of Neurology, Queen Square)
- 3-day programme
- Assumes minimal prior knowledge
- Emphasises functional and clinical neuroanatomy
- Includes dissecting room sessions examining real brains!
Three-day course: £200 (early bookings); £240 (late bookings)
Suitable for undergraduate / postgraduate students in medicine and biomedical sciences, neuroscience and psychology
18 november 2007
Psychoacoustics Book
How hearing works and how the brain processes sounds entering the ear to provide the listener with useful information are of great interest to psychologists, cognitive scientists, and musicians. However, while a number of books have concentrated on individual aspects of this field, known as psychoacoustics, there has been no comprehensive introductory coverage of the multiple topics encompassed under the term. Music, Cognition, and Computerized Sound is the first book to provide that coverage.
The book begins with introductory chapters on the basic physiology and functions of the ear and auditory sections of the brain, then proceeds to discuss numerous topics associated with the study of psychoacoustics, including cognitive psychology and the physics of sound. The book has a particular emphasis on music and computerized sound. An accompanying CD-ROM includes many sound examples to help explicate the text.
BCI Book
Toward Brain-Computer Interfacing
Interest in developing an effective communication interface connecting the human brain and a computer has grown rapidly over the past decade. The brain-computer interface (BCI) would allow humans to operate computers, wheelchairs, prostheses, and other devices, using brain signals only. BCI research may someday provide a communication channel for patients with severe physical disabilities but intact cognitive functions, a working tool in computational neuroscience that contributes to a better understanding of the brain, and a novel independent interface for human-machine communication that offers new options for monitoring and control. This volume presents a timely overview of the latest BCI research, with contributions from many of the important research groups in the field.
The book covers a broad range of topics, describing work on both noninvasive (that is, without the implantation of electrodes) and invasive approaches. Other chapters discuss relevant techniques from machine learning and signal processing, existing software for BCI, and possible applications of BCI research in the real world.
Brain Modelling
Signal processing and neural computation have separately and significantly influenced many disciplines, but the cross-fertilization of the two fields has begun only recently. Research now shows that each has much to teach the other, as we see highly sophisticated kinds of signal processing and elaborate hierachical levels of neural computation performed side by side in the brain. In New Directions in Statistical Signal Processing, leading researchers from both signal processing and neural computation present new work that aims to promote interaction between the two disciplines.
The book's 14 chapters, almost evenly divided between signal processing and neural computation, begin with the brain and move on to communication, signal processing, and learning systems. They examine such topics as how computational models help us understand the brain's information processing, how an intelligent machine could solve the "cocktail party problem" with "active audition" in a noisy environment, graphical and network structure modeling approaches, uncertainty in network communications, the geometric approach to blind signal processing, game-theoretic learning algorithms, and observable operator models (OOMs) as an alternative to hidden Markov models (HMMs).
01 november 2007
Brain Storm
A bold scheme to map the entire human brain has become the mission of many scientists from a host of different fields. Paul Smaglik tracks the interdisciplinary career implications.
A major goal for neuroscientists is to build a complete wiring diagram of the human brain. Such a feat has already been achieved for the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans. But going from worm to human requires a serious leap: C. elgans has 302 neurons connected together through 7,000 synapses; the human brain has an estimated 10 billion neurons, each of which has an average of 10,000 synaptic connections.
Undaunted, many neuroscientists are pursuing at least part of the problem, and...read onI (sigh) Robot
Reminds me of Alien. As long as the makers of this stuff do not forget that geriatric grandma's tend to suffer from osteoporosis and carrying this thing could be a bone breaker...
PS It's a Honda Jim, but not as we know it...
TOKYO (AFP) - As Japan greys, who will look after the elderly? Maybe one day their aging children -- in robot suits -- if technology under development comes out of the laboratory and into the home The suit looks clunky, takes 10 minutes to put on, weighs thirty kilos (66 pounds) and has blinking lights and wires reminiscent of a robot in a sci-fi movie.
But it allows the wearer to lift a person as heavy as 100 kilos as if they were carrying only half that weight.
"I don't feel heavy at all. Because of air pumped in the suit, I just feel like I'm carrying a normal backpack," said Hiroi Tsukui, a participant in the project as she carried a young man onto a table to demonstrate to onlookers.
For now the suit, developed by Kanagawa Institute of Technology, is only made to order and generally targeted at nursing homes and hospitals.
But Tsukui hopes it will be used in ordinary homes in the future.
"Of course 80-year-olds won't be able to wear this. But perhaps for their children who are in their 50s and need to take care of their parents, this could prove to be useful," she added.
Japan, which has one of the world's lowest birth rates and yet forbids immigration, is increasingly turning to robots to take care of rudimentary tasks in hospitals and nursing homes as the young population dwindles.
Researchers are also looking to improve "robot suits" for the elderly to wear themselves for more autonomy, instead of relying on caregivers or their children.
A "muscle suit" developed by Tokyo University of Science also allows the wearer to lift heavy objects.
The half-body suit incorporates artificial muscles made of elastic rubber and nylon and air pumps for the arms.
Hiroshi Kobayashi, an associate professor at the university that spearheaded the project, admitted that hurdles remain before it could be easily used.
The suit, which weighs four kilos, presents "some safety concerns for elderly people," he said.
"So for now we have limited the suit to caretakers or even construction workers whom I think would benefit greatly from this. But we hope in the future this will give old people more mobility with their arms," he added.
Another product designed to give elderly greater mobility is auto giant Honda Motor's "Walking Assist" product which can help the elderly walk independently without the help of a cane, walking frame or arm of a carer.
It's a chunky belt with sensors and leg straps that monitor leg movements to help the user walk correctly.
As the person walks, a device behind the thigh pushes the leg forward and once he or she steps on the ground, another one at the front of the thigh pushes inwards, stabilising the user.
The belt is currently only a prototype, as its three-kilo weight could be a little too heavy for a frail elderly man or woman.
Taiji Koyama, an assistant chief designer at Honda R&D Co., hopes that in the near future his team, which has spent eight years on the project, will be able to make the belt lighter and easier for the elderly.
"We hope to roll this out as a product as soon as possible so people will be able to use it," the engineer said.
"It is a lot lighter than 'muscle suits' that use artificial muscle. They still have a long way to go to become mainstream as they remain difficult to wear," he added.
Keep on smiling
Why is this lady smiling ? not because she is high but because her EEG does not consume any (battery) power. Just body heath that keeps the brain going..
made in Flanders by IMEC. Boy are we good...
More of this on Medgadget
Thanks to Greg for sending this link.









