fresh bytes
Subscribe Now

The brain’s unique reaction to words could sign people into devices

87304915.jpg

Blair Armstrong and his team of researchers from the Basque Center on Cognition, Brain, and Language in Spain observed the brain signals of 45 subjects while they read a list of 45 acronyms, such as FBI and DVD. According to New Scientist, they found that the volunteers’ brains reacted differently to each one, enough for the system to pinpoint their identities with 94 percent accuracy.

Brain signals are typically hard to analyze, so Armstrong’s team decided to focus on the part of the brain associated with reading and recognizing words. That part’s in charge of recognizing word definitions, which can have subtle differences between people. It can’t replace fingerprint scanners just yet, since you still need to be attached to electrodes for the method to work. But Armstrong believes that the technique could be refined further and developed into a viable alternative to fingerprints.
via Engadget

Continue reading 


Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Feb 6, 2026
In which we meet a super-sized Arduino Uno that is making me drool with desire....

featured chalk talk

Speed Matters: Methods and Methodologies to Get the Most Performance
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Ludovic Jacomme from Siemens and Amelia Dalton investigate the benefits that Siemens Veloce proFPGA CS can bring to your next FPGA-based prototyping project and how you can take advantage of this solution today.
Jan 19, 2026
29,958 views