The EyeMario app allows users to control Nintendo's Mario video game with eye movement detected by electrodes (inset).
Since the source code is being made freely available, it can be modified by anyone to use eye movements to control any application. Medical applications already in the works at National Instruments include a game for children suffering from amblyopia (lazy eye), which enables them to perform their prescribed eye exercises while playing a fun game. And a parallel development effort is adapting the source code to allow eye-movement control of wheelchairs for patients who have lost the use of their hands."We created EyeMario as a next-generation video gaming interface," said Waterloo Labs team member and Analog Hardware Engineer Chris Culver. "But we are now in the early stages of exploring other applications in medical and other areas that can use this technique."
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