Sunday, June 2, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Video games of the future to adapt to players' mood

Darpan News Desk, IANS, 24 Apr, 2014 10:55 AM
    A team of engineers at Stanford University has developed a hand-held controller that allows video games to adapt to a player's level of engagement.
     
    For instance, if a player's heart rate, blood flow, rate of breath and other physiological signals show he or she is bored with an unchallenging game, the controller can gather that information from the individual's hands and increase the level of difficulty.
     
    When players are engaged, their heart rate and breathing generally become faster, Gregory Kovacs, a professor of electrical engineering at Stanford and head of the laboratory where the prototype controller was developed in collaboration with Texas Instruments, told EFE.
     
    The engineers removed the back panel from an Xbox 360 controller and replaced it with a 3-D printed plastic module equipped with sensors that measure gamers' blood pressure, heart rate, temperature and breathing rate and depth.
     
    Users' arms and hands transmit signals that indicate what is happening internally, the professor told EFE.
     
    Created in Kovacs' laboratory under the leadership of doctoral candidate Corey McCall, the controller has sparked the interest of several companies in the video game and entertainment industry.
     
    This non-invasive system for measuring autonomic nervous system activity has numerous applications beyond the world of gaming, Kovacs said, noting that it could be used to prevent traffic accidents.
     
    Sleepy drivers continue to be a major cause of car crashes, he said, adding that many lives could be saved by using sensors on the steering wheel to monitor motorists' level of alertness.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    OMG! This perfume smells like a corpse

    OMG! This perfume smells like a corpse
    By mixing a combination of three disgusting smells, a Nebraska-based chemist claims she can create 'Eau De Death’ that mimics the smell of rotting human flesh!

    OMG! This perfume smells like a corpse

    Revealed: Why You Don't Like Another Glass Of Cold Water

    Revealed: Why You Don't Like Another Glass Of Cold Water
    Drinking a glass of cold water when you feel thirsty on a muggy summer evening is pleasant but if you go on drinking a few more glasses, the experience turns unpleasant. Researchers have now discovered why.

    Revealed: Why You Don't Like Another Glass Of Cold Water

    Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Puzzle Solved: US Scientist

    Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Puzzle Solved: US Scientist
    A Michigan State University researcher has claimed to plug the hole in famous theoretical physicist and cosmologist Stephen Hawking’s black hole theory.

    Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Puzzle Solved: US Scientist

    Kerala students to compete in designing a Mars rover

    Kerala students to compete in designing a Mars rover
    Students of an engineering college in Kerala have been selected to compete in a challenge to design a rover for the US Mars exploration mission.

    Kerala students to compete in designing a Mars rover

    Robots to motivate you!

    Robots to motivate you!
    California-based NGO XPRIZE has launched a competition inviting teams to develop artificially intelligent (AI) systems capable of delivering a talk at the TED (Technology, Education, Design) conference without human intervention.

    Robots to motivate you!

    Cheers! Google Glass to earn you a free drink in this bar

    Cheers! Google Glass to earn you a free drink in this bar
    Wear the Google wearable computer device and get your drink absolutely free at this bar at a San Francisco-based hotel.

    Cheers! Google Glass to earn you a free drink in this bar