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Mind-Control Games
#1
Toy trains 'Star Wars' fans to use The Force

By Mike Snider, USA TODAY

Could The Force be with you? A toy due in stores this fall will let you test and hone your Jedi-like abilities.
The Force Trainer (expected to be priced at $90 to $100) comes with a headset that uses brain waves to allow players to manipulate a sphere within a clear 10-inch-tall training tower, analogous to Yoda and Luke Skywalker's abilities in the Star Wars films.

No, you're not tapping into some "all-powerful force controlling everything," as Han Solo said in the movies. But you are reaching out with mind power via one of the first mass-market brain-to-computer products. "It's been a fantasy everyone has had, using The Force," says Howard Roffman, president of Lucas Licensing.

Mind-control games may be the coming thing: Mattel plans to demonstrate a Mind Flex game (also due this fall), which uses brain-wave activity to move a ball through a tabletop obstacle course, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Thursday.

In the Force Trainer, a wireless headset reads your brain activity, in a simplified version of EEG medical tests, and the circuitry translates it to physical action. If you focus well enough, the training sphere, which looks like a ping-pong ball, will rise in the tower.

A state of deep concentration is needed to achieve a Force-full effect. "When you concentrate, it activates the training remote," says Frank Adler of toymaker Uncle Milton Industries, which is creating the Trainer. "There is a flow of air that will move the (ball). You can actually feel like you are in a zone."

Star Wars sound effects and audio clips emitted from the base unit "cue you in to progress to the next level (from Padawan to Jedi) or when to move the sphere up or down to keep challenging yourself," Adler says.

"Until today, EEG technology has been designed for rigorous medical and clinical applications with little regard to price (and) ease of use," says Greg Hyver of NeuroSky, which developed the brain-wave technology for both games. "We are putting this exciting technology into everyone's living room."

Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/lifestyle/2...-toy_N.htm


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#2
Mind game where players use brainwaves to float ball through hoops unveiled

A mind game where players guide a ball through an obstacle course using nothing but the power of their thoughts has been developed by toy manufactuers.
 
By Urmee Khan, Digital and Media Correspondent
Last Updated: 12:36AM GMT 06 Jan 2009
 
The aim of the game is to concentrate hard enough to generate enough energy to power a fan which in turn causes a ball to levitate and move through a series of hoops Photo: AP The Mind Flex comes with a brain-scanning headset which measures brainwaves and turns them into energy.

The aim of the game is to concentrate hard enough to generate enough energy to power a fan which in turn causes a ball to levitate and move through a series of hoops.

The toy made by Mattel, the world's largest toy manufacturer and makers of the Barbie doll , has been previewed in the US.

The game is expected to cause much discussion at the Consumer Electronics Show 2009 which is currently taking place in Las Vegas.

Mattel have remained tight lipped about how the product will work but say it will be released in America, later in the US year for $80.

Games like Mind Flex are expected to be very successful in 2009 as the games industry becomes more on making gaming more intuitive.

Last year, Emotiv Systems developed a helmet-like headset that, it claimed, let users control game characters with their thoughts.

The device, issued with receptors, claims to be able to read activity among the brain's neurons. The player then "teaches" the device's software to associate thought patterns with commands.

One of the drivers of that trend has been the success of Nintendo's Wii and its best-selling game Wii Fit where users move a board they stand on to control their game characters in a number of physical activities such as skiing or yoga.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/scienceandtec...eiled.html


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