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Virtual Dictionary
Gamma Wave Gamma waves are a type of brain wave which can not be detected by non-invasive brain interfaces, due to their inability to penetrate the skull. They operate at the 26?100 Hz frequency band. Prior to their discovery through invasive brain interfaces, it was thought that the brain only operated at speeds of around 20hz. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
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Results by page [1] Scent Wave is a single-scent dispenser, each unit holding and dispensing a single scent-stick. Using a dry-air technology that releases fragrance without sprays, aerosols or heated oils, Scent Wave is one of those systems that will work after being bunged in a cupboard for six months. Used primarily in retail environments, this system often finds use in large-scale VR such as military simulations and immersive training. Resource Type not Available Resource Type not Available The Sinulator was the first of a new wave of teledildonics devices to be developed in 2004-2005. Essentially a remote-controlled vibrator with a USB socket on the end of a long cable, the Sinulator offers no touching, no hugging, caressing, or intimacy, but offers the first real, thou primative being with your partner through VR. ![]() ![]()
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News containing the Term Gamma Wave:
Results by page [1] (24/11/2009)
A mechanism that the brain uses to filter out distracting thoughts to focus on a single bit of information has been discovered by researchers at the Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience and Centre for the Biology of Memory at the Norweg...
(29/07/2014)
When you're expecting something—like the meal you've ordered at a restaurant—or when or when something captures your interest, unique electrical rhythms sweep through your brain. These waves are called gamma oscillations and ...
(23/05/2010)
Google on Wednesday opened to the world an innovative Wave communications platform that liberates people from the constraints of traditional email. "We are going to open up Wave to everyone today," Google Wave team chief La...
(30/04/2009)
Scientists have studied high-frequency brain waves, known as gamma oscillations, for more than 50 years, believing them crucial to consciousness, attention, learning and memory. Now, for the first time, MIT researchers and colleagues have f...
(15/03/2013)
Last May, two security researchers volunteered to look at a few suspicious e-mails sent to some Bahraini activists. Almost one year later, the two have uncovered evidence that some 25 governments, many with questionable records on human rig...
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