With wearable devices becoming more common - I am anticipating a wave of "sensors" that can be as simple as small band-aid patches that wirelessly send data to your smart device. Those sensors could also open up human-coputer-interface innovations like these.
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In similar space ...
There was a post about a thought-to-text project from MIT no less --
"AlterEgo"
10 months ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45174125 8 years ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16780357
When I saw the demo posted last year it left me with an uneasy feeling -- gut feel said it was more marketing than a real working technology demo. Nothing seems to have come out of that lab since then -- strengthemning my suspicions.
[1]: https://scispace.com/pdf/sub-auditory-speech-recognition-bas...
I have never liked talking aloud to Siri or similar, but I could see using "voice" as an interface for so much more if I could speak silently to my device.
Not sure I'd want to put an adhesive patch on my neck every morning so I can silently talk to an LLM in the cubicle farm. I hope this is not our future.
Very cool tech though and surprisingly good results for so little training.
I think time might be better spent improving a lip reading model (no adhesive required), assuming we're unable to read brainwaves directly.
It could also be the ultimate, always-on remote control for everything around, with a near-zero error rate.
See this hn thread about it: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46816228
It ended up altering my handwriting even after I stopped using it.
In the office, a non-contact video solution (lip reading) is likely to be far more popular, but a lot depends on which is more accurate.