Business Standard

FACEBOOK INTENDS TO USE BRAIN WAVES TO TYPE WORDS WORLD

- SARAH FRIER

Facebook’s research unit Building 8 is working to make it possible for people to type using signals from their brains, part of the lab’s broader effort to free people from their phones.

Regina Dugan, hired from Alphabet last year to oversee the lab, said that within “a few years’ time” Facebook aims to develop a system that can type at 100 words per minute, just from monitoring the brain, without using any kind of implant. The company is working with outside academics on the issue.

This would give “the ability to text a friend without taking out your phone or the ability to send a quick email without leaving the party,” Dugan said Wednesday at the social network operator’s F8 developer conference. The technology may not require thinking in actual letters, she said. The lab also is working on a way for people to hear through their skin.

“One day, not so far away, it may be possible for me to think in Mandarin and for you to feel it instantly in Spanish,” Dugan said.

Far-fetched as it may sound, Dugan said researcher­s have already found it possible to use brain waves for typing at eight words per minute. She said the power of the brain is much greater than what is translated through speech, comparing the brain’s ability versus speech to “four HD movies per second streaming over a 1980s dial-up modem.”

It’s one of many Facebook initiative­s for the very long term. The company also talked Wednesday about the future of augmented reality — saying it will only work if people can wear clear, fashionabl­e AR glasses that don’t obscure their eyes. Executives also talked about advancemen­ts in their efforts to spread internet connectivi­ty, like using a helicopter to broadcast internet access in a disaster zone.

For its more near-term goal of making videos and images more immersive, Facebook unveiled a design for two new threedimen­sional cameras. The cameras, which look like black disco balls or bug eyes, will be given to some filmmakers and partners to help create more 3-D video content.

Silicon Valley is in a race to come up with the next world-changing technology, after smartphone­s. Self-driving cars and artificial intelligen­ce are all the rage, but several start-ups have begun work on understand­ing brains. Elon Musk, chief executive officer of Tesla and Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es, recently formed a company called Neuralink that would implant electrodes in the brain to upload and download thoughts.

For Facebook, the research connects to its overall goals because it relates to improving people’s social experience­s, Dugan said. It could also make it possible for those who are deaf or otherwise disabled to communicat­e more easily.

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