Drones Controlled with Brain-Computer Interface From: ECN Magazine - 10/02/2017 Single unmanned autonomous vehicles (UAVs) directed by joysticks, radio controllers, and mobile phones are already accomplishing a variety of useful tasks, such as aerial photography and security patrols. But using multiple drones requires multiple human operators, and this presents a coordination problem. Now a single operator using emerging human-brain interfaces can control a swarm of drones, making possible new classes of applications, according to Panos Artemiadis, director of the Human-Oriented Robotics and Control (HORC) Lab at Arizona State University. Read the entire article at: https://www.ecnmag.com/news/2017/10/drones-controlled-brain-computer-interface Links: Panos Artemiadis http://www.public.asu.edu/~partemia https://www.expouav.com/speaker/panagiotis-panos-artemiadis Human-Oriented Robotics and Control Lab http://horc.engineering.asu.edu/HORC/Home.html Using Your Brain to Control a Swarm of Drones https://www.expouav.com/session/using-your-brain-to-control-a-swarm-of-drones Using Wireless Interface, Operators Control Multiple Drones by Thinking https://www.wirelessdesignmag.com/news/2016/07/using-wireless-interface-operators-control-multiple-drones-thinking Mind Drones (video 2:42) https://vimeo.com/173548439 Drone Control: How the Human Brain Can Guide Robotic Swarms https://www.techbriefs.com/component/content/article/1198-tb/news/news/27709