Let me guess…
- not very accurate
- needs to be trained on an individuals brain.
Although DeWave only achieved just over 40 percent accuracy based on one of two sets of metrics in experiments conducted by Lin and colleagues, this is a 3 percent improvement on the prior standard for thought translation from EEG recordings.
The Australian researchers who developed the technology, called DeWave, tested the process using data from more than two dozen subjects. Participants read silently while wearing a cap that recorded their brain waves via electroencephalogram (EEG) and decoded them into text.
Yep.
Just wait until this is used on suspects to try and get the “truth” out of them and then it’s discovered that the accuracy is bad. Wouldn’t surprise me if many an innocent person is sent to jail because of this mind reading AI.
I just used this comment commercially.
You shall be hearing from my lawyer. Please provide name and address.
With further refinement, DeWave could help stroke and paralysis patients communicate and make it easier for people to direct machines like bionic arms or robots.
The article doesn’t even hint at any use in a justice system. There’s nothing to suggest that this could even in principle be used as a lie detector.
“No, doc, I came here in a time machine, that you built!”
So is it only useful for people who silently read? Because I don’t see any use case if so, it is not like we think using words, lol.
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