Neurable seeks to license non-invasive BCI technology for consumer wearables
Updated
Updated · TechCrunch · Apr 28
Neurable seeks to license non-invasive BCI technology for consumer wearables
12 articles · Updated · TechCrunch · Apr 28
Neurable, which raised $35 million in December, is offering its AI-powered EEG brain-sensing technology for integration into products like headphones, hats, and glasses.
The company has partnered with HP Inc.'s HyperX for gaming headsets and iMotions for behavior research, aiming to expand into health, productivity, and gaming industries.
Neurable emphasizes user privacy, stating data is encrypted, anonymized, and only used for AI training with explicit consent, as the neurotechnology sector reaches a commercial inflection point.
Could work headphones one day track your focus as a performance metric?
Is a non-invasive BCI the first step toward society accepting brain implants?
Will brain-enhancing wearables create a new and permanent 'cognitive divide' in society?
Who gets to write the rules for what companies can do with our brainwaves?
Can 'anonymized' brain data truly protect our thoughts from being decoded and exploited?
With our thoughts as data, what happens in the first major 'brain-data' breach?