#tactile-stimulation

[ follow ]
Data science
fromMedium
2 days ago

Context matters... A lot

Large language models excel at tasks but struggle with context, leading to potentially misleading answers despite their capabilities.
Gadgets
fromWIRED
6 years ago

The Best Game Controller for Every Kind of Player

A good controller significantly enhances gaming experience, with various options available for different platforms and features.
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

The older I get the more I notice that my body remembers arguments my mind has forgiven. A tone of voice, a specific pause before someone speaks, a door closing at a certain speed. Forgiveness turned out to be a cognitive event that the nervous system never agreed to. - Silicon Canals

Forgiveness involves both conscious decisions and unconscious bodily responses, highlighting the complexity of emotional healing beyond mere intention.
Medicine
fromWIRED
3 days ago

A New Implant Aims to Rewire Stroke Patients' Brains

Epia Neuro aims to help stroke patients regain hand function using a brain implant and motorized glove.
Arts
fromKALTBLUT Magazine
3 days ago

Perceptrum and the Emergence of Augmented Painting: When the Canvas Begins to Listen - KALTBLUT Magazine

Perceptrum redefines painting by allowing touch, creating a sensory dialogue that transforms the relationship between observer and artwork.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
5 days ago

body agency and the ways wearable devices let people regain control of their physical forms

Body agency is a power returned after an incident took it away from the user's physical form, and some wearable devices and technologies have this exact goal in mind.
Wearables
#brain-computer-interface
fromZDNET
2 months ago
Wearables

Your next pair of headphones may be able to read your brain - and you'll be glad it can

fromZDNET
2 months ago
Wearables

Your next pair of headphones may be able to read your brain - and you'll be glad it can

Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The real technology problem isn't screen time. It's that your phone learned your emotional patterns faster than any person in your life ever did, and now it meets needs that no human relationship has been given the chance to meet. - Silicon Canals

Phones have become the most emotionally attuned presence in people's lives, affecting their relationships with others.
#trpm8
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

A newly-discovered molecular process explains how our bodies perceive the cold

Research on the TRPM8 protein reveals its role in cold sensation, potentially leading to new treatments for cold-induced pain.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

A newly-discovered molecular process explains how our bodies perceive the cold

Research on the TRPM8 protein reveals its role in cold sensation, potentially leading to new treatments for cold-induced pain.
Berlin
fromFast Company
1 week ago

How distance changes perception: The making of an observer

Understanding the United States involves navigating complex cultural and institutional landscapes shaped by personal experiences and global interactions.
Wearables
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Neuralink Patient Using Brain Chip to Carry Out Important Life Task: Playing World of Warcraft

A paralyzed man uses a Neuralink implant to play World of Warcraft hands-free, showcasing rapid adaptation to the technology.
Philosophy
fromThe Conversation
2 weeks ago

Human vision: what we actually see - and don't see - tells us a lot about consciousness

Significant visual processing occurs unconsciously in the brain, as demonstrated by blindsight and inattentional blindness phenomena where people perceive visual information without conscious awareness.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

There's a kind of intelligence that never gets measured because it lives entirely in the body. The person who can feel the weather changing in their knees, read a dog's mood from across the street, and know a room is wrong before anyone speaks. - Silicon Canals

Intelligence extends beyond cognitive abilities, encompassing bodily awareness and interoception as vital forms of processing information.
UX design
fromMedium
2 weeks ago

The Physics of Great UX: Making Digital Interfaces Feel Real

Building a motion system in product design enhances user experience by aligning with human cognitive expectations and physical principles.
Science
fromFuturism
3 weeks ago

Researchers Upload Fly's Brain to Matrix, Let It Control Virtual Body

Eon Systems created a computational model of a fruit fly's 125,000 neurons and 50 million synapses that exhibits multiple behaviors in a virtual environment with 95% accuracy in predicting motor behavior.
Artificial intelligence
fromMedium
2 weeks ago

Designers, your next user won't be human

Every SaaS company will transform into agentic-as-a-service platforms, requiring designers to solve fundamental problems in agent interaction, behavior, and user experience as AI agents become central to enterprise software.
OMG science
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

Scientists built a tickle robot to solve one of biology's strangest mysteries

Neuroscientists use Hektor, a tickle robot, to systematically study the neurological and physiological mechanisms of ticklishness by measuring brain activity, facial expressions, heart rate, and other bodily responses.
Arts
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
2 weeks ago

New book shows why physical maps have an important role to play in our digital world

A cartography professor discovered 96 historically significant maps in a forgotten university archive, revealing cartography's vital role in preserving sociopolitical memory and demonstrating maps' importance beyond navigation.
Mindfulness
fromMail Online
3 weeks ago

I sat on a 9,000 chair that dissociates your brain from your body

The Aiora chair, priced between £5,700 and £9,950, claims to induce altered mental states comparable to deep meditation through specialized seating design and biomechanics.
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 week ago

explore WINT design lab's regenerative futures where humans connect with their bodies

WINT Design Lab envisions regenerative futures through devices and biotextiles that allow humans to connect with their bodies more and free themselves from fossil materials that harm them and the environment.
Wearables
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 weeks ago

Electrodes connected to the brain allow two people with paralysis to type with their minds

A brain-machine interface allows paralyzed patients to type on a keyboard using only their thoughts, achieving high-speed communication with minimal errors.
Miscellaneous
fromArchDaily
4 weeks ago

Mapping Space Without Sight: Inside SEAlab's Sensory Architecture

SEAlab designed a school for blind and visually impaired children by prioritizing spatial perception through observation, creating a simple geometric layout with a central courtyard as a navigational anchor.
Data science
fromNature
3 weeks ago

AI can 'same-ify' human expression - can some brains resist its pull?

Large language models are homogenizing human writing styles, reasoning methods, and perspectives, potentially creating widespread sameness in discourse even among non-direct AI users.
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

People who can't walk through a store without running their fingers along every surface aren't being childish - they learned early that the world only felt real when their body confirmed it because the emotional information they received from people was never reliable enough to trust - Silicon Canals

For many of us, that compulsive need to touch isn't about poor impulse control. It's about confirmation. It's about making sure the world around us is real, solid, tangible - because somewhere along the line, we learned that the emotional landscape we navigated wasn't.
Psychology
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 weeks ago

Brain implant allows people who are paralyzed to type using their thoughts at speed of texting

Brain-computer interfaces now enable people with paralysis to type at 22 words per minute, approaching normal smartphone texting speeds.
Artificial intelligence
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Reality Splits: Seeing Different Worlds in Mixed Reality

Mixed reality systems create perceptual conflicts when users see different digital objects in shared spaces, reducing collaboration synchrony and increasing mental effort while eroding confidence in joint decisions.
Mission District
fromMedium
1 month ago

What is teleoperation?

Autonomous vehicles require invisible design infrastructure beyond sensors and algorithms to handle real-world complexity and edge cases at scale.
Wellness
fromDesign Milk
1 month ago

Emergence is a New Kind of Multi-Sensorial Wellness Experience

The wellness sector reaches $6.3 billion in 2023 with 7.3% annual growth through 2028, expanding beyond traditional treatments into neuroscience-based experiences like Kinda Studio's personalized meditative Emergence service.
Renovation
fromArchitectural Digest
1 month ago

Architects Say Touchscreens Ruined the Smart Home. Now They're Going Back to Buttons

High-end residential design increasingly favors analog controls and hidden technology over visible smart home interfaces, driven by user frustration, reliability concerns, and aesthetic preferences.
Cocktails
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
1 month ago

Provenance and Pleasure: Engineering Intimacy - San Francisco Bay Times

Nora creates transformative bar experiences through beverage consulting that prioritize provenance, terroir, and process, turning transactional venues into culturally connected destinations where guests develop lasting loyalty.
Miscellaneous
fromThe Walrus
1 month ago

I Tried New Tech That Claimed It Could Hack My Dreams | The Walrus

A sleep doctor's early fascination with unexplained nighttime deaths led him to establish one of Canada's first independent sleep laboratories, pioneering sleep disorder diagnosis and treatment.
OMG science
fromFuturism
1 month ago

Researchers Get Human Brain Cells Running Doom

Cortical Labs taught living human brain cells to play the complex 3D video game Doom, advancing biological computing capabilities beyond their previous Pong achievement.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

9 signs you feel others' emotions as if they're your own and what that reveals about your rare wiring - Silicon Canals

Highly sensitive individuals physically experience others' emotions in their bodies and become emotionally drained by crowds due to their neurological wiring for deep empathic responses.
#virtual-reality
#experiential-marketing
Gadgets
fromZDNET
2 months ago

This haptic trackpad is one of the most exciting computing accessories I saw at CES

Hyper released a premium wireless TrackPad Pro for Windows, a USB4 M.2 PCIe enclosure, and Qi2-capable solid state power banks.
Cars
fromBusiness Insider
1 month ago

EVs turned everything into a touchscreen - but physical buttons are making a comeback

Automakers are reintroducing physical buttons and traditional door handles in electric vehicles due to regulatory pressure and customer backlash.
#physical-ai
fromZDNET
2 months ago
Artificial intelligence

What's the deal with Physical AI? Why the next frontier of tech is already all around you

fromZDNET
2 months ago
Artificial intelligence

What's the deal with Physical AI? Why the next frontier of tech is already all around you

fromScienceDaily
2 months ago

Researchers found a tipping point for video gaming and health

Spending more than 10 hours a week playing video games may begin to affect young people's eating habits, sleep quality, and body weight, according to new research led by Curtin University and published in Nutrition. The study surveyed 317 students from five universities across Australia. Participants had a median age of 20 years, placing the focus squarely on young adults during a key stage of habit formation.
Video games
fromGSMArena.com
2 months ago

Razer unveils an "AI-native" headset with cameras that see what you see

The Motoko's dual first-person-view cameras are positioned at eye level to basically see what you see, enabling real-time object and text recognition - translating street signs, tracking gym reps, summarizing documents on the fly, all of that. There are also dual far and near-field mics, working together to capture voice commands and pick up dialogue within view.
Mobile UX
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Accomplishment Hallucination: When the Tool Uses You

Accomplishment Hallucination is a cognitive state in which speed feels like competence, output feels like accomplishment, and work feels done when the actual work-the thinking-through, the failure-mode analysis, the sitting with uncertainty until the problem reveals its structure-hasn't happened at all. Physics need not apply. AI can create a similar state in waking life—literally, as your very words assume form before your eyes like a conjuring sorcerer. But, like real life, the code may be buggier than we realize.
Artificial intelligence
UX design
fromComputerWeekly.com
2 months ago

Expanding sensory experiences in virtual environments | Computer Weekly

Comprehensively multisensory XR/IRL environments enable inclusive, immersive interactions by combining multiple sensory interfaces, but face technical, cost, and adoption hurdles.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

What Can Gaming Do for Our Intelligence?

Effective intelligence — attention, working memory, decision-making, and learning speed — is trainable through experience and interventions such as gaming, leveraging neuroplasticity.
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
2 months ago

This MIT Prototype Translates Images Into Fragrances That Your Mind Remembers Better - Yanko Design

At a time when memories are increasingly flattened into folders, feeds, and cloud backups, a new experimental device from MIT Media Lab proposes a far more intimate archive: scent. Developed by Cyrus Clarke, the Anemoia Device is a speculative yet functional prototype that translates photographs into bespoke fragrances using generative AI, inviting users not to view memories, but to inhabit them through the body.
Gadgets
Mobile UX
fromMedium
1 month ago

Bringing buttons back: rethinking how smart your smartphone should be

Physical button-based interfaces are resurging as an antidote to touchscreen doomscrolling, blending nostalgia and analog design with focused, limited-function devices.
Mental health
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: What people with no 'mind's eye' can tell us about consciousness

Vividness of mental imagery, handwriting practices, psychiatric-diagnostic revisions, and emerging brain–computer interfaces shape memory, creativity, education, mental-health classification, and technology development.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
2 months ago

Loving Attention and Aesthetic Appreciation

Aesthetic attention that silences the self can cultivate the patient, clear vision required for genuine loving relationships.
Video games
fromGameSpot
2 months ago

Brain Scanning Headsets, Cool New Controllers, AI Gaming Companions: CES 2026 Roundup

CES showcased numerous gaming reveals, trailers, gameplay previews, and hardware demos from major companies including NVIDIA, Razer, LEGO, HyperX, and XReal.
fromMail Online
2 months ago

Futuristic chair puts you in an 'altered state of mind' within minutes

Each of the individual parts - the headrest, arms, backrest, and seat - move along individual horizontal paths so that they aren't accelerated by gravity like a swinging rocking chair. At the same time, very smooth bearings cut resistance and friction to a minimum, allowing the chair to follow your body's natural movements. Dr David Wickett, the designer of the chair and co-founder of DavidHugh Ltd, says this system is so sensitive that 'even breathing can lift the entire body'.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Hyperphantasia: When Imagination Is as Vivid as Real Life

Close your eyes and picture an apple. Most people see something-a faint, slightly blurry image, less vivid than a real apple. A few, however, will see it as clearly as if it were sitting right in front of them. This ability is called hyperphantasia. Hyperphantasia, literally meaning "beyond imagination," refers to exceptionally vivid mental imagery. It is often described as the opposite of aphantasia, a condition in which people report little or no ability to form mental images.
Psychology
UX design
fromMedium
2 months ago

Designing for Invisible Experiences

Ubiquitous computing and invisible design reduce user interaction, enabling automated transactions that increase service adoption and accelerate retail and commerce growth.
Gadgets
fromEngadget
2 months ago

This game controller has a force feedback steering wheel lodged in the middle

GameSir's Swift Drive combines a compact central steering wheel with force feedback, Hall-effect sensors, haptic triggers, and long battery life for a miniaturized driving controller.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Why Your Eyes Like What Your Eyes Like

Real estate with ocean views, stunning mountain vistas, and wide-open green spaces sell at premium prices because humans find those settings pleasing [1-5]. Certain color combinations in fashion-such as brown and forest green-blend harmoniously, while others, such as hot pink and orange, clash. And our eyes like certain proportions in visual objects (like buildings and human faces) but not others.
Science
fromFast Company
1 month ago

This AI-powered machine turns photos into smells

One scientist at MIT, Cyrus Clarke, is working to do just that. Alongside a team of fellow researchers, Clarke has developed a physical machine called the Anemoia Device, which uses a generative AI model to analyze an archival photograph, describe it in a short sentence, and, following the user's own inputs, convert that description into a unique fragrance. The word "anemoia" was coined by author John Koenig and included in his 2021 book, The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows.
Artificial intelligence
Wearables
fromEngadget
2 months ago

This haptic wristband pairs with Meta smart glasses to decode facial expressions

Aleye is a haptic wristband paired with Ray‑Ban Meta smart glasses that converts facial expressions and gestures into customizable wrist vibrations for blind users.
UX design
fromMedium
2 months ago

Spatial vibe coding: prototyping immersive reality with AI

AI-driven vibe coding enables rapid prototyping of spatial XR experiences, producing functional 3D canvases with WebXR, frameworks, and production-ready toolchains.
Science
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Why Sensory Overload Isn't About "Too Much"

The brain exerts extra effort interpreting unclear sensory information; predictability reduces sensory strain, and autism and ADHD often involve prolonged higher effort.
Gadgets
fromGameSpot
2 months ago

HyperX Reveals "Non-Invasive" Neurotech Gaming Headset--Whatever That Means

A neurotechnology-powered HyperX headset aims to improve gamers' focus, reaction time, and accuracy using non-invasive EEG sensors and AI-driven training metrics.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Affective Side of Interoception

Interoception senses the body's internal milieu and evaluates goals, shaping attention and affect and including taste and smell as partly interoceptive.
fromMedium
1 month ago

AI's text-trap: Moving towards a more interactive future

LLMs have made AI assistants a standard feature across SaaS. AI assistants allow users to instantly retrieve information and interact with a system through text-based prompts. Mathias Biilmann, in his article " Introducing AX: Why Agent Experience Matters," discusses two distinct approaches to building AI assistants. The Closed Approach involves a conversational assistant embedded directly within a single SaaS product. Examples include Zoom's AI Companion, Salesforce CRM's Einstein, and Microsoft's Copilot. The Open Approach involves external conversational assistants, such as Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini,
Artificial intelligence
Wearables
fromEngadget
2 months ago

Meta's EMG wristband is moving beyond its AR glasses

Meta's wrist-based neural band enables EMG-based pinch and swipe control of in-car infotainment and could extend to vehicle functions through a Garmin partnership.
UX design
fromSmashing Magazine
3 months ago

Giving Users A Voice Through Virtual Personas - Smashing Magazine

AI-powered personas turn scattered user research into instant, contextual, multi-perspective feedback for any decision-maker with a single question.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

AI-Decoded Brain Signals May Help Paralyzed Regain Movement

Artificial intelligence (AI) machine learning is making a difference in assistive technology to help restore movement for the paralyzed. A new study in the American Institute of Physics journal APL Bioengineering shows how AI has the potential to restore lower-limb functions in those with severe spinal cord injuries (SCIs) by identifying patterns in brain signals captured noninvasively via electroencephalography (EEG).
Artificial intelligence
Gadgets
fromTechRepublic
2 months ago

How AI Mirrors Are Changing the Way Blind People See Themselves - TechRepublic

AI tools enable blind individuals to receive detailed, personalized visual feedback about their appearance, creating new practical opportunities and emerging emotional and psychological consequences.
Wearables
fromComputerworld
1 month ago

Why there's no 'screenless' revolution

Screenless AI devices and wearables are rapidly emerging, but traditional screens and screen-based devices remain prevalent.
UX design
fromMedium
2 months ago

Part II: Human computing

Humans and machines become collaborative co-intelligence partners, demanding design that preserves human agency, responsibility, and ethical alignment.
Gadgets
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 months ago

cyber pet for homes with stretchable neck shows playful emotions using interactive display

OlloNi is a home-focused cyber pet robot that expresses emotions via digital eyes, records memories in a visible heart core, and uses touchable sensors and cameras for intuitive companionship.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

I see time as a grid in my mind. I remember the birthdays of friends I haven't seen for 65 years

Did someone with spatial-sequence synaesthesia design the calendar app on mobile phones? Because that's how time and dates look in my brain. If you say a date to me, that day appears in a grid diagram in my head, and it shows if that box is already imprinted with a holiday, event or someone's birthday. Public holidays and special events like Christmas and Easter are already imprinted for the year, and the diagram goes backwards to about 100,000BC
Psychology
UX design
fromMedium
2 months ago

The most popular experience design trends of 2026

Designing for intent, Machine Experience (MX) design, improved prompts, and AI-generated design systems will underpin hyper-personalized AI user experiences in 2026.
Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

I see sounds as shapes. Synaesthesia has given me an extraordinary ability for languages

Auditory-visual synaesthesia produces vivid visual imagery from sound, facilitating exceptional language learning but complicating everyday tasks like driving with loud music.
Gadgets
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
2 months ago

mobile app converts spoken words into printed stickers with braille for the visually impaired

Nemonic Dot lets visually impaired users create Braille stickers via a mobile app and a tactile, portable printer that automatically produces standardized, readable raised dots.
fromEngadget
2 months ago

The CES companies hoping your brain is the next big thing in computing

An Electroencephalogram (EEG) is a clinical tool to monitor the electrical activity of our brains. Put very simply, our minds are constantly moving ions around, and when they reach the scalp, it's possible to measure those ions. By placing electrodes on the scalp, you can record the changes in voltages pushed out by our brains more or less in real time. These voltages are commonly grouped into categories, which are often described as brain waves.
Wearables
Gadgets
fromZDNET
2 months ago

I watched a gamer use brain-reading headphones under pressure - and he locked in fast

Neurable's EEG-based BCI technology is being integrated into HyperX gaming headphones to enhance focus, accuracy, and reaction times for esports athletes.
[ Load more ]