麻豆传媒

Tongue-tingling interface lets you taste data

Tongueduino's electrodes send signals from sensors to the tongue, allowing taste buds to "read" information such as the orientation of Earth's magnetic field

CAN YOU imagine feeling Earth鈥檚 magnetic field on the tip of your tongue? Strangely, this is now possible, using a device that converts the tongue into a 鈥渄isplay鈥 for output from environmental sensors.

Gershon Dublon of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology devised a small pad containing electrodes in a 5 脳 5 grid. Users put the pad, which Gershon calls Tongueduino, on their tongue. When hooked up to an electronic sensor, the pad converts signals from the sensor into small pulses of electric current across the grid, which the tongue 鈥渞eads鈥 as a pattern of tingles.

Dublon says the brain quickly adapts to new stimuli on the tongue and integrates them into our senses. For example, if Tongueduino is attached to a sensor that detects Earth鈥檚 magnetic field, users can learn to use their tongue as a compass. 鈥淵ou might not have to train much,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou could just put this on and start to perceive.鈥

Dublon has been testing Tongueduino on himself for the past year using a range of environmental sensors. He will now try the device out on 12 volunteers.

Blair MacIntyre at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta says a wireless version of Tongueduino could prove useful in augmented reality applications that deliver information to users inconspicuously, without interfering with their vision or hearing. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a need for forms of awareness that aren鈥檛 socially intrusive,鈥 he says. Even Google鈥檚 much-publicised Project Glass will involve wearing a headset, he points out.

Topics: augmented reality / Biology / Brains / Psychology