Inexpensive EEG Devices? 36
Rustcycle akss: "To extend prior music generation experimentation, I'm interested in creating music via genetic algorithms using neurofeedback to assign fitness values. Does anyone have a recommendation for EEG systems that are affordable outside research institutions? What's the best system under $2k? Ideally I'd want a multi-sensor system so I could do sonification experiments to 'hear' correlated data from different regions, but I'd settle for a one or two sensor system for initial experimentation — so long as there are drivers for Mac / Linux. How safe / unsafe is the OpenEEG route?"
Homebrew (Score:3, Informative)
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This system is dirt cheap (Score:2, Funny)
2. Eat sugar
3. Compose like your hands are on fire.
You need enough sugar floating around so that if you ever take a PET Scan, your brain would show up a sort of platinum white colour on the screen.
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The Casio is interchangable with a Keytar.
Sounds familiar... (Score:2)
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That depends (Score:3, Funny)
That depends, how comfortable are you drilling holes into your own skull?
OpenEEG (Score:4, Informative)
As for analyzing the data it produces, that also becomes difficult. "ACtivity" on an EEG signal could be as small as a uV. Sample it as fast as you can. We used a PIC processor to sample.
Also, muscle signals can drown out the electrodes, try not to move.
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As a kid, I had more than my fair share of fun with some pretty old ('70s or so) osci's at my dad's workplace (electrical engineering).
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EEG and ECG use some pretty clever tricks to actually get a signal. One of them is taking the difference between electrodes placed on the heart or head and one placed on an extremity.
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Maybe back issues of electronics magazines? (Score:2)
I think people used to hook them up to lights and then smoke weed and admire the pretty patterns...
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This can't be stressed enough, which is why you will often see "not for medical use" disclaimers on the el-cheapo (comparitively) EEG devices out there. I have a copy of that article (somewhere - maybe one day I will stick it up on my website), and from what I remember, it was nothing
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A Friend of Mine (Score:3, Informative)
And he can't find anything on the internet that is useful to get it working.
So, be careful what you buy, because you might just get a hunk of hardware, but no software to run it.. if you're going the cheap route that is.
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EEG options (Score:1)
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Mindset (Score:1)
DON"T TRY THIS AT HOME (Score:4, Insightful)
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Store down the street (Score:1)
Do you need to own it? (Score:2)
It's not clear to me from your articles whether you actually need ownership. This sounds like the kind of thing you might be able to get some gradstudent at the next medical college interested in. Voila: access to reasonably good and usually well-maintained equipment. Maybe someone is going to get a seniors thesis out of it. Heck, there may even be a way to get some small internal tech-development grant or some such to cover operational costs.
You don't think you're the first one to think of this, right? H
Thanks! (Score:1)