The world’s biggest scientific BCI conference takes place at TU Graz, including a BCI science slam on 22 September.
The international community of brain computer interface (BCI) experts will meet between 18 and 22 September in Graz. As part of the programme a Science Slam will put an entertaining spotlight on the current state of BCI research. Composing music by means of measuring the brain's electrical potentials, neuroprostheses and thought-controlled computer games still seemed all but impossible only a few years ago, but now they are already a fact of real life - at least in the fields of research and clinical application. Brain-computer interfaces are evolving rapidly, and these formerly pure laboratory applications are on the cusp of becoming an everyday reality. So where is the research now, and where is it heading? International BCI experts from over 20 countries discuss this important subject at the invitation of the Institute of Neural Engineering at TU Graz from 18 to 22 September at the BCI Conference in Graz - the world's biggest scientific BCI conference. The team of TU Graz under the leadership of institute head Gernot Müller-Putz attracted international attention in the summer of 2017 with a publication about music composition by means of BCI . Reasonably musical persons are able to "think" melodies in their individual components directly into musical notation.
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