It may look like the
poor man’s Google Glass, but don’t let the
iPhone-strapped-to-the-side-of-your-head thing fool you, Neurocam and its
accompanying app may foretell the future of advertising.
Demoed recently at the
Human Sensing 2013 conference in Yokohama, Japan, the system includes a
headband equipped to hold an iPhone next to the wearer’s temple. The phone is
fitted with a special prism so the camera can record footage from the wearer’s
point of view.
The headset also
includes EEG sensors that scan the brain for correlative spikes in interest.
The Neurocam iPhone app assigns the EEG data a value from one to 100. When the
data hits 60, interest is detected, which cues the phone’s camera to start
recording. Footage is recorded as five-second GIFs, which are then stored in an
album so users can remember what exactly struck their interest.
While most of us can
easily remember that pair of boots or motorcycle that made us linger,
advertisers would love to tap that vein of consciousness. Which is why
advertising titan Dentsu is backing the Neurocam via a joint venture called
Dentsu ScienceJam.
“Because this system is
hands-free, we think it could capture a life log, which would be different from
deliberately pressing a shutter to capture things you like,” ScienceJam’s Kana
Nakano said in this video.
“As an application in a
B2B environment, Neurocam could determine what goods in stores interest people.
And because the information includes position data, you can do mapping, so it
could also show what places people are interested in as an aid for urban
development planning. We think it could be used in lots of ways like that.”
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