To understand how a wireless rfid look like inside and its component
Motorola Patents E-Tattoo Mark of the Beast, That Can Also Read Your Thoughts by Listening to Unvocalized Words in Your Throat...
ExtremeTech.com reported on January 7, 2014:
Imagine trying to patent the smartphone, or for that
matter, the tattoo. Any company that could swing that, could probably also
patent the fork and knife. Incredibly, a new application from Google-owned
Motorola Mobility seeks a patent not for any particular utensil, but rather, for
setting the table. In other words, if you have an electronic smart tattoo, and
want it to speak to your mobile communications device, you may soon be able to
do it in spades, but you will have to do it Google style.
But hold on for a minute, as there is a bit more to the
whole concept than might first appear. The tattoo they have in mind is actually
one that will be emblazoned over your vocal cords to intercept subtle voice
commands — perhaps even subvocal commands, or even the fully internal
whisperings that fail to pluck the vocal cords when not given full cerebral
approval. One might even conclude that they are not just patenting device
communications from a patch of smartskin, but communications from your soul.
Or
maybe not. It has been known for decades that when you speak to yourself in your
inner voice, your brain still sends neural spike volleys to your vocal
apparatus, in a similar fashion to when you actually speak aloud. The main
difference between the two, is that the nervous action driving covert speech
as it is called, is subthreshold, and does not generate the full muscle
contraction. The same might also be said for imagining throwing a baseball — it
is probably not possible to even do so without simultaneously calling up and at
least partially launching unamplified motor programs. Stated another way, your
thoughts are your motor intentions, only they are not always recognizable as
such if they are sufficiently abstracted.
The
actual patent speaks of picking up an “auditory signal” from the tattoo, and
converting it into a digital signal. The signals from the brain, carried by
spikes on the hundreds of laryngeal nerve fibers (and other nerves modulating
the vocal tract), are already digital. They bear no real resemblance to an
auditory signal at this point. After transformation in the numerous muscles that
control the speech organs, there is still no single signal that could be sent to
a transducer to generate sound recognizable as speech. Looking at an image of a
smart tattoo pioneered by
John Roger’s Illinois-based research lab, there seems to be all kinds of
sensor goodies which can be built in to pick up various biologics. I don’t know
if the strain gauges could pick up an actual speech signal in the same way that
a conventional microphone could, but they would certainly generate useful
information. The built-in EMG and ECG electrodes would not pick up individual
spikes so to speak, but could certainly generate electrical records of muscle
activity, and perhaps eventually compound nerve potentials. Rogers helped to
form a company, MC10, that hoped to commercialize this technology, and although
he indicated that he was not involved in these recent ventures, they have joint
development efforts with Motorola Mobility.
There
is already a device known as a
throat microphone
that has been used to record an auditory signal in noisy conditions like, for
example, the cockpit of a jet fighter. Developed along with the first pressure
suit back in 1934, it used a direct contact microphone to pick up sound waves
traveling through solid objects such as the throat wall. Later so-called throat
microphones, such as the Xbox 360 accessory, only use an open-air microphone.
They do not really exclude background noise, nor have the ability to pick up
unvoiced signals. What got some folks attention recently, namely those over at
Patently Apple, was a few peculiar statements in the patent regarding the
recording of galvanic skin responses. These guys first heard about the e-skin
tattoo from Regina Dugan, the former DARPA head who is now in charge of advanced
research at Motorola. Their article notes that the e-tattoo would provide a nice
way to do authentication, but the seemingly out of place inclusion of the lie
detection talk certainly raises some questions.
Covert voice activation of your device in a crowd would
definitely be a nice feature. Instead of actually speaking to Siri or Google
Now, you could merely think your voice command. Detecting stress and
other emotion could have some applicability too, although who else really needs
to know if you have a lump in your throat? Perhaps I have not read that many
patents recently, but there certainly did seem to be an excess of wording, and
scope. Every wireless communications protocol I am familiar with was included in
some form, somewhere. Not only were there definitions for words like “a” and
“an,” but also actual percentages associated with a list of words like “about,”
“approximately”, “essentially”, and “substantially”. Clearly this is one among
several recent patents that we all may want to keep an eye on.
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