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Engineers develop enhanced vision; GPS tracking tech for your brain

By | April 9, 2010, 7:00 AM PDT

Can scientists make our senses smarter?

A team of researchers from the Telecommunications Research Center in Vienna have unveiled cutting-edge technology that combines the Internet, global positioning satellite tracking technology and biofeedback to augment and enhance your natural vision.

Engineers Matthias Baldauf, Peter Fröhlich and Siegfried Hutter took a state-of-the-art eye tracker originally designed for web-use analysis and tweaked it for use in the real world.

The researchers trained one camera on the user’s eye and a second on the scene in front of them. By linking the cameras with a smartphone with a built-in compass and GPS, the researchers could also identify the wearer’s orientation and location.

Then they added sensors that indicate whether the wearer is looking up or down. The entire setup was attached to a bicycle helmet.

If the user closes their eyes for two seconds, a request is made for information about the object(s) in front of them. The request goes to a remote computer, which scans geo-reference databases on the Internet (such as Google Earth) and forwards the result back to the user’s cell phone.

By using a text-to-speech engine, the data can be heard through an ear piece. The researchers call it a “sixth sense” that happens to use two of the other five to work.

In an example of a real-life application, a person who bumps into an old friend on the street could recall their name and the date of their most recent encounter.

Called “Kibitzer” and targeted for “mobile urban exploration,” the innovation could be useful for industry as well, such as for security training or work in the field.

The proof of concept invention was presented last weekend at the inaugural Augmented Human International Conference in Megeve, France.

But that’s not the only approach to augmenting human ability.

Here’s a video of another wearable “sixth sense” device for gestures developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology:

Follow Augmented Human on Twitter.

[via Discovery News]

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

Follow him on Twitter.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: Engineers develop enhanced vision; GPS tracking tech for your brain
Anybody here read "Daemon" or "Rainbows End"? This tech is one step closer to what is known as 'augmented reality' supplamental information about reality is delivered to you in real time: visuals, text, locations, recent histories anything you might imagine! We will be strangers to each other for only instant as our e-lives are downloaded and accessed for immediate consumption.
Cool stuff, scary stuff, you decide
Posted by skregas@...
13th Apr 2010
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RE: Engineers develop enhanced vision; GPS tracking tech for your brain
If put into glasses with a camera, screen, mic, headphones, data &
voice access.

Cloud compute some of the info to take load of the processor.

Recognize when someone gives you their name ("my name is") or number
("my phone number is"), takes a picture automatically creates a
contact card. Any time you see them again it brings up their contact
card. You can search contact cards by voice or hand gesture.

Voice to text (if your deaf or listening to music)

Advanced OCR text to voice (for blind or just cause)

Turn by turn directions with an arrow overlay of the street.

Geo aware virtual tagging (for fun, or to add info someplace)

movies, videogames, music

barcode scanner (scans other tags too) reports information about the
product.

Grocery list reminder (your at a store that has something on your
list, it reminds you to pick that up too)

There are sooo many things it could do. Each would pose its own
development issues, and its all pretty much on the cusp of
feasibility, but just image, you put on your glasses and the
universe is at your fingertips.
Posted by shadfurman
13th Apr 2010
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RE: Engineers develop enhanced vision; GPS tracking tech for your brain
Talk about computing in 'God Mode.' Wow!
Posted by ITOdeed
14th Apr 2010
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RE: Engineers develop enhanced vision; GPS tracking tech for your brain
I can see tons of military applications also. Imagine a soldier looking at a hilltop and wanting to know if civilians or enemy soldiers are hiding there. Blink and you get a satellite photo, say a command and you get a close up photo from the nearest drone - lives are saved and costly weapons are not used.

Think also about the humanitarian relief applications: where are the people who need food, is that building ready to collapse, show a map of the underground gas mains, or will the flood wall of the hurricane hit my city. This is a fantatic melding of technology, and I'm saying it's about time it got here!
Posted by pfarrjam
20th Apr 2010
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