Human-Human Interface
Control another person's hand with your brain — the demo no one forgets.The Human-Human Interface is our most dramatic neuroscience demonstration. One person's brain sends a voluntary command, and through EMG recording and electrical stimulation, another person's hand moves involuntarily. It's safe, it's startling, and it teaches more about the nervous system in 60 seconds than a week of lectures.How it works: Person A flexes their arm — the device reads the EMG signal The signal is amplified and sent to Person B's forearm via stimulation electrodes Person B's hand twitches — involuntarily controlled by Person A's brain What students learn: How motor neurons transmit movement commands The difference between voluntary and involuntary muscle activation Electrical stimulation principles used in clinical rehabilitation What's included: Human-Human Interface unit EMG recording electrodes Stimulation electrode pads (TENS-style) All cables and connections needed Who it's for: Science teachers who want a wow moment on day one Neuroscience outreach and museum events University demonstrations Corporate and community STEM events As seen in Greg Gage's TED Talk — over 10 million views. The single best way to get anyone excited about neuroscience.
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- Default Title — 299.99 USD — In stock
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