Article 36RB2 An Amazing Pair of Interactive Robots That Use Split Brain Waves to Engage in Movement

An Amazing Pair of Interactive Robots That Use Split Brain Waves to Engage in Movement

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#36RB2)
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Kal Spelletich, a San Francisco robotics artist and longtime friend of Laughing Squid and Noisebridge co-founder Mitch Altman combined their talents to create an incredible interactive robot installation that was live-streamed in April 2017 and required the participation of audience members to work. The two large split brained robots, named Romulus and Remus, were controlled respectively by the brainwaves of volunteers, all harvested by a "customized" EEG.

Volunteers will use the distinct brainwaves from each side of your brain (via a hacked and customized EEG that reads right side and left side brainwaves) to make the two robots move, collaborate, interact, fight and even kiss. (When they do "correctly" interact, symbolic and metaphoric events will happen, activating lights, fog, other robots, sounds, chaos.) "We will harvest brain wave data from live audience volunteers. This live streaming brain data will run the two robots.

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