Close X
Monday, November 25, 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

    What? Facebook to deliver Internet from the sky!

    What? Facebook to deliver Internet from the sky!
    As the popular social networking site Facebook goes on an acquisition spree, its founder Mark Zuckerberg now has plans to make it more sci-fi in the near future.

    What? Facebook to deliver Internet from the sky!

    'WhatsAppitis' is a real disease: Lancet

    'WhatsAppitis' is a real disease: Lancet
    What if you are told that excessive chatting or texting on 'WhatsApp' messenger service can hamper your health to an extent that you get a thumb disease! "WhatsAppitis" is real, and happening.

    'WhatsAppitis' is a real disease: Lancet

    Pluto's got Neighbour? Giant earth-like planet at outer edge of our solar system!

    Pluto's got Neighbour? Giant earth-like planet at outer edge of our solar system!
    Are you aware of the outer edge of our solar system? Astronomers have identified a new most-distant member, bringing the region into the limelight. The distant dwarf planet, called "2012 VP113", has been found to be beyond the known edge of the solar system.

    Pluto's got Neighbour? Giant earth-like planet at outer edge of our solar system!

    Here's an App that won't let you frequent bars!

    Here's an App that won't let you frequent bars!
    If you are found lingering outside one, the App would play a video recounting your misery as an alcoholic or audio of your daughter begging you not to drink!

    Here's an App that won't let you frequent bars!

    How a cyclone looks from space in 3D!

    How a cyclone looks from space in 3D!
    The first spacecraft designed to detect light rain and snowfall from space has now captured the first 3D images of precipitation on earth.

    How a cyclone looks from space in 3D!

    App that connects mothers with babies in womb!

    App that connects mothers with babies in womb!
    Call it the mother of apps! A new smart phone app is here that helps expectant mothers listen to the heartbeat of their unborn child - and record their feelings too.

    App that connects mothers with babies in womb!