‘Thync’ is a new wearable device that makes use of
electroencephalography to measure the brain’s electrical activity, and adjust
neuron activity. Simply put, it has the ability to change your mood!
All you need to do is attach the device to your forehead and
it will immediately shift your state of mind. A corresponding iPhone app lets
you pick the type of mood you want to experience, and even adjust the
intensity. You could choose to become happy, relaxed, focused, or energized.
And the best part is, you get to do it without using drugs, energy drinks, or
alcohol.
The device is based on neuro-signalling, a process in which
ultrasound waves are used to connect with neuron connections in the brain,
causing a person’s mood to alter. The device will send electrical signals or
ultrasound waves to the specific areas of the brain that are centers of energy,
concentration, and relaxation. The instant effects of Thync last 30 minutes to
an hour, with carry-over effects of the “vibe” lasting several hours, depending
on the intensity of the stimulation. The Thync settings can be tweaked via an
accompanying smartphone application
The company that developed Thync was founded by engineering
and neuroscience experts from Stanford, MIT, and Harvard. They spent $15
million on research and development, with the sole aim of coming up with a
device that taps into the brain and transform its activity. The first ever
Thync device was officially launched last Tuesday, mostly receiving good
reviews.
Boston Business Journal editor David Harris, who got an
opportunity to try out Thync even before it hit the market, selected the ‘rest’
mode on the app. “I was told I would feel an itchiness sensation and even some
pain at first,” he wrote. “I felt a little like Frankenstein, except I was previously
alive. I felt the itchiness, like a pressure building in my temple and then
some sort of zing – a result of the zapping going on between my nerves and the
device.”
Although Harris admitted that he did feel a little tired, he
also hadn’t slept very well the night before, so he couldn’t be sure if the
mood was really induced by Thync. “I started zoning out, focusing on the
skyline outside the office’s window,” he added.
Jamie Tyler, the company’s co-founder and chief scientific
officer, told Harris that the device has been tested on 3,700 people, both in
the lab and in the real world. “We think of this as a new category of wearable’s
that operates in synergy with your body,” said Tyler. “Instead of reading what
you’re doing, we’re acting in synergy… it primes your body to be in a more
relaxed state.”
Since 2011, the company has raised numerous millions of
dollars from investors, and hopes to take up a sizeable chunk of the wearable
technology market.

No comments:
Post a Comment