The possible applications of wearable interfaces capture the imagination, yet even as they pervade movies and popular culture, there are very few examples of practical systems outside of research laboratories. The challenge is to design wearable interfaces that utilize newly developed technologies in appropriate ways. Here we present a helmet that draws on emerging technologies to provide a wearable brain-computer interface and visual feedback system for law enforcement.
Cliff Shin is both an award winning designer and a design educator. Also, he is actively involved in product development where innovation, creativity, and responsibility are needed the most. He focuses on emotions, how users feel, and his design principle is “Last-Long” design. Cliff Shin always keeps in mind and makes constant and consistent efforts in order to achieve last-long design, timeless design. Cliff Shin proposes and speaks about “Security Blanket Theory”, a principle that enables products lasting long.
The Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is an interdisciplinary research institute devoted to leading-edge research in the physical sciences, computation, engineering, biology, behavior, cognition, and neuroscience.