Feeling tired and a bit sluggish? Or simply looking to boost your productivity? Well the future has a lot to offer. tDCS has been about for over 100 years but recently started floating around on the radar after Sally Adee wrote an article on tDCS for New Scientist, Apparently DARPA have been using the technology to reduce the training time of snipers by targeting the area of the brain associated with object recognition.
tDCS stands for transcranial direct current stimulation and is the process of delivering a constant low level current to a specific area of the brain via small electrodes this increases the plasticity of the brain and in turn makes your synapses fire faster giving you reported “incredible focus and mental clarity”.
Sounds like science fiction huh? Well this year sees a massive leap forward in the technology with Foc.us Labs releasing a commercialy available product in the Foc.us headset allowing anyone with around £150 the ability to have a go.
Marketed as a gaming headset with the tagline “Faster Processor, Faster Graphics, Faster Brain! the Foc.us unit aims to cross boundries between the world of science fiction and reality. It comes complete with the headset, case, sponges (for contact points) and a micro USB cable, it even has a snazzy app available for iOS devices to control the current and duration of each session.
While this technology becoming accessible may pave the way for a brighter future it also raises a whole host of ethical queries. Will it be classed as cheating to use tDCS in exams for instance or on the pro gaming circuit? More importantly is it ethically correct to enhance our minds to what can only be described as superhuman?
Have your say below.
AMD has finally lifted the curtain on the highly-anticipated Ryzen 7 9800X3D, putting an end…
In the latest development of GPU technology, AMD is stepping up to challenge NVIDIA’s DLSS…
Push performance to the next level with the blazing speed and massive bandwidth of Crucial®…
ROG Strix OLED XG27AQDMG gaming monitor ― 27-inch (26.5-inch viewable) 1440p glossy WOLED panel, 240…
Its 45-inch 21:9 Ultra-WQHD display gives you a 34% wider view than a standard 16:9…
The Kolink Unity Code X is a high-quality yet affordable showcase that’s ideal for building…