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posted by on Thursday December 08 2016, @06:18AM   Printer-friendly
from the fun-with-hallucinations dept.

As indicated by the name, video games are a very visual medium. But that hasn't stopped participants in a study at the University of Washington (UW) successfully playing through a game without ever actually looking at it, hearing it or using any of the standard five senses. Instead, they were guided through virtual mazes via direct brain stimulation, in a demonstration of technology that could one day form the basis of sensory prosthetics to help visually-impaired people navigate the real world, or provide a new way for anyone to interact with virtual ones.

The five players taking part in the UW study interacted with the game through a process known as transcranial magnetic stimulation, where a magnetic coil is placed on the back of the skull to directly stimulate certain parts of the brain safely and painlessly. This technique has shown the potential to treat migraines, aid learning, improve memory and allow direct brain-to-brain communication.

[...] "The way virtual reality is done these days is through displays, headsets and goggles, but ultimately your brain is what creates your reality," says Rajesh Rao, senior author of the study. "The fundamental question we wanted to answer was: can the brain make use of artificial information that it's never seen before that is delivered directly to the brain to navigate a virtual world or do useful tasks without other sensory input? And the answer is yes."

At last we know how Luke was able to counter the drone with the blast shield down: direct brain stimulation.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 08 2016, @11:16PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 08 2016, @11:16PM (#438918)

    "it's not a sixth sense, it just triggers the sight sense other than through the eyes."

    From the article:

    "We're essentially trying to give humans a sixth sense," says lead author, Darby Losey.