Wearables are getting smarter and that’s a good thing. It can be a bit of a minefield keeping track of all of the tech being crammed into fitness trackers, smartwatches and VR headsets, though. It’s ...
Galvanic, a Dublin-based startup, has created a Bluetooth-enabled galvanic skin response sensor that's also a game controller. The product, called the PIP sensor, is designed to help users learn to ...
When you hand your new acquaintance one of your cards, there’s a chance you might feel an instant connection. But what if you could know almost instantly whether they felt the same way? With the Dr.
This article is part of EDN and EE Times’ Hot Technologies: Looking ahead to 2016 feature, where our editors examine some of the hot trends and technologies in 2015 that promise to shape technology ...
The wearable industry is, by all means, growing to welcome all the players who want to jump in. The next big technology company to make its foray into the smart wearable device market is none other ...
“We are technocrats,” Bill Gates recently stated. What do technocrats believe and do? They think that technology and science provide the answers for the problems we face. Our educational system is ...
Tobii Pro, the global leader in eye tracking research solutions, has partnered with Shimmer and integrated their wearable wireless GSR (galvanic skin response) sensor into its software analysis ...
This is a home made Galvanic Skin Response sensor (a.k.a. lie detector). It's just a Lego motor wire and aluminium foil hooked up together to your fingers, giving an electrical reading to fingers, by ...
This simple Galvanic Skin Response (or lie detector, in layman’s terms) is made out of Lego motor wire and aluminum foil. It determines the electrical resistance of your fingers by measuring how ...
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