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This is an archive article published on October 31, 2013

Mind-reading camera shoots whatever you find interesting

The wearable camera that starts recording when it detects you are interested in what you are seeing.

Researchers have developed a wearable camera that starts recording when it detects that you are interested in what you are seeing.

The neurocam,developed by Tokyo-based company Neurowear,incorporates sensors that detect electrical activity in the wearer’s brain.

Depending on how much activity is detected,the user’s interest level in what they’re observing is assigned a numerical value from 1 to 100.

Any time that number exceeds 60,a 5-second Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) animated clip is recorded,capturing whatever happens to be in the forward-facing camera’s line of sight,’Gizmag’ reported.

Those clips are date- and location-stamped,and stored in a video album for subsequent review.

A manual mode is also accessible,for those times when users want to record footage of things that they themselves are not all that excited about.

In its current prototype form,the neurocam uses an integrated smartphone as its brains,storage medium,and camera.

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It is hoped that a less gawky production version of the device would incorporate its own custom electronics.

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