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Gen-next toys may be controlled by your thoughts

Researchers have now developed a technology which allows electronic devices to be activated using electrical impulses from brain waves.

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Some of the most popular toys on the children's list to Santa on Christmas eve like remote-operated cars, helicopters and toy robots may soon be controlled via a headset using the power of thoughts, scientists say.

Researchers from the University of Warwick in the UK have developed a technology which allows electronic devices to be activated using electrical impulses from brain waves, by connecting our thoughts to computerised systems.

This could be based on levels of concentration - thinking of your favourite colour or stroking your dog, for example, researchers said. Instead of a hand-held controller, a headset is used to create a brain-computer interface - a communication link between the human brain and the computerised device.

Sensors in the headset measure the electrical impulses from brain at various frequencies - each frequency can be somewhat controlled, under special circumstances. This activity is then processed by a computer, amplified and fed into the electrical circuit of the electronic toy. 

"Whilst brain-computer interfaces already exist - there are already a few gaming headsets on the market - their functionality has been quite limited," said Christopher James, professor at Warwick. "New research is making the headsets now read cleaner and stronger signals than ever before - this means stronger links to the toy, game or action thus making it a very immersive experience," said James.

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