Brainwave-Controlled Helicopter Project Funded By Kickstarter

puzzlebox-orbit-steve

Steve Castellotti, Puzzlebox CEO Credit: Puzzlebox

A brainwave-controlled helicopter project was fully funded by Kickstarter, and is hoping to come into homes very soon. The project was initially posted as a DIY hack on Instructables two years ago, and it’s supposed to be an educational toy.

The company behind the project, Puzzlebox, will release guides and software to make it easy for children as young as 10 to understand, rebuild, and modify their helicopters. The system uses a NeuroSky MindWave Mobile EEG headset to record brainwave data. This is sent to software on a tablet, smartphone or a specifically designed pyramid-shaped base. This software converts the brainwave data into flight commands, which control the flight of the spherical helicopter, called Orbit.

puzzlebox-brainstorm

In the tablet/smartphone setup, the command signals are sent via an infrared dongle connected to the audio port, whereas the pyramid version has high-powered infrared emitters that can be used to operate other toys and devices, like TV screens.

Users can select an action for the helicopter to perform, like hovering in place or flying across the room. Once the EEG headset detects a particular mental state has been reached and maintained, it emits the right commands.

The project amassed $74,000 out of a goal of $10,000 and was fully funded on December 8.

1 Comment on "Brainwave-Controlled Helicopter Project Funded By Kickstarter"

  1. Oh my goodness, such devices become commercially available, thats just unbelievable! Reminds me of the uplink in “The Matrix” or those fancy devices in “Fringe”.
    I just hope that the technology is not used for military purposes (of course I’m naive here…).

Leave a Reply to Angus Stone Cancel reply

Email address is optional. If provided, your email will not be published or shared.