How to Make a Friend?, a short film by Jinfei Ge, Bin He, Myrtille Huet, Julie Jarrier-Stettin, Yuqiang Zhang

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How to Make a Friend?, a short film by Jinfei Ge, Bin He, Myrtille Huet, Julie Jarrier-Stettin, Yuqiang Zhang
A mind-controlled robot arm doesn’t have to mean brain implants
FYI: http://dlvr.it/R91Pl1
A mind-controlled robot arm doesn’t have to mean brain implants
ICYMI: http://dlvr.it/R8xtLR
A mind-controlled robot arm doesn’t have to mean brain implants
http://dlvr.it/R8tQG6
Flyga med tankekraft
Bin He, biomedicinsk teknik professor vid University of Minnesota (Foto: UM)
Att flyga med tankekraft: Svindlande perspektiv del III:
Modern teknologi har idag nått så långt att den kan använda och utnyttja mänsklig tankeenergi till att styra apparatur eller påverka en datorskärm. Detta ger ett svindlande perspektiv, ja, kanske t.o.m. ett kommande Nobelpris? Mannen bakom detta pionjärarbete är…
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In a jaw-dropping feat of engineering, electronics turn a person's thoughts into commands for a robot. Using a brain-computer interface technology pioneered by University of Minnesota biomedical engineering professor Bin He, several young people have learned to use their thoughts to steer a flying robot around a gym, making it turn, rise, dip, and even sail through a ring [2:29 min.].
A remote controlled helicopter powered by human thought Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/351893#ixzz2VoGXWjYJ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=6LWz4qa2XQA Earlier this week, a remote controlled helicopter was flown through a college gym in Minnesota, navigated by the human brain. The experiment involved the quad-copter. Science Daily repo…
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Mind over mechanics - @UMNews
Thanks to the work of biomedical engineering professor Bin He and his team, this flying robot takes its orders from a person’s thoughts.
It’s a staple of science fiction: people who can control objects with their minds. At the University of Minnesota, a…
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