BCI startup Neurable looks to license its ‘mind-reading’ tech for consumer wearables
Neurable specializes in “non-invasive” BCI, which distinguishes itself from firms like Neuralink — the Elon Musk-founded startup known for inserting computer chips directly into people’s skulls — in that its product doesn’t require users to undergo brain surgery to enjoy its benefits. Neurable’s technology works through a combination of EEG sensors and signal processing that can scan a user’s brain activity, analyze it with AI, and provide information about a person’s cognitive performance.
“Through Neurable’s licensing platform, OEMs can directly integrate its AI-powered brain-sensing technology into existing hardware, such as headphones, hats, glasses, and headbands, while maintaining full control over product design, user experience, and distribution,” the company said in a press release on Tuesday. Neurable has already fostered partnerships with a number of companies to test out its effectiveness. ’s HyperX, a gaming brand, with which it created a headset designed to help gamers “level up their game play by optimizing focus and performance.
“What we’re doing now is we’re basically saying, like, ‘Hey, we’ve demonstrated that we’re getting great traction’,” Alcaide said. “Like, let’s make this as ubiquitous as heart rate sensors on your wrist, right?” Despite the “non-invasive” label, brain data is arguably a little bit more intimate than the information culled from a heart rate sensor, so what kind of privacy protections does a company like Neurable provide?
Alcaide said that the company ensures that user data is “protected and anonymized.
“We make sure we follow HIPAA standards, like we’ve gone above and beyond where a lot of startups would be at our stage to make sure that we protect the data, we encrypt it, and that we anonymize it,” Alcaide said. Does Neurable leverage a user’s neural data to train its AI software? “We can with user consent, right?” said Alcaide.
“But we do it in a very specific way.
” That specific way involves asking the user whether their data can be used for the purposes of particular experiments, Alcaide said.
“We are not collecting the data, just training on it willy-nilly,” he said.
In other words, this kind of data usage is quite targeted.
” What comes after that inflection point is the big question
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