A new progression has taken place under the auspices of Intel, exceedingly celebrated and world’s largest semiconductor chip maker, based on revenue. The Santa Clara microchip giant has joined a mounting technological expedition (that was considered the stuff of science fiction one time) permitting people to cope with computers, television sets and cell phones solely with their thoughts.
Let’s move from here and crack down on the statement of said Dean Pomerleau, an Intel researcher in Pittsburgh, who is working with scientists at Carnegie Mellon University and elsewhere to make sense of brain patterns in a preliminary study of the concept. Dean Pomerleau states, if the global information network is accessed simply by using the power of researchers’ thoughts, it would surely pioneer implausible new opportunities for computing technology.
Nevertheless, it has been found that by means of analyzing the brain’s electrical activity and blood flow when people consider certain words and actions, scientists have identified patterns that computers can be programmed to read. The same endeavor has opened the door to quite a lot of interesting applications.
On the other hand, in recent experiments, people suffering from paralysis have been equipped with brain-reading gadgets that let them change TV stations, turn on lights and write on a computer merely by thinking about doing those activities.
But Intel researcher Pomerleau stressed that his company is nowhere near making a thought-directed products and has no instant plans to put chips into people’s heads. As per him, it may prove more practical to send a person’s thoughts by the use of an electronic device the person carries like a phone, adding that Intel is beginning research on the concept merely “to help us build better chips.”
Intel Corporation is the world’s largest semiconductor chip maker, based on revenue. The company is the inventor of the x86 series of microprocessors, the processors found in most personal computers and also makes motherboard chipsets, network interface controllers and integrated circuits, flash memory, graphic chips, embedded processors, and other devices related to communications and computing.