I know some folks have built their own CHEC units. I have designs for my own (to be built one of these days…) but then I saw the following and it got my hobby-engineering brain going.
I know this technology isn’t exactly new, but I caught an expose of it on the Science Channel TV show, Brink. This technology seems simple, inexpensive (relatively) and adaptable. I am not promoting this product, nor am I affiliated with it. I am a 30 year old dad in the middle of Indiana who happens to watch science shows.
http://www.neurosky.com/ More specifically,
http://www.neurosky.com/products/neurosky-mindset-usa/ From what I could discern, this headset basically measures concentration and relaxation with the idea of developing concentration, in this case, mostly affecting video games or programmed visual media. It also provides a very simple color coded graph of brain wave activity.
The website notes this in the info about the headset, “With the additional NeuroTech R&D Kit, users can perform their own brainwave research, or develop their own software and hardware applications to interact with, and take advantage of all the MindSet’s capabilities.*1
(*1 System requirements: Windows Vista (preferred), 2.0 GHz Core 2 Duo or Equivalent Processor, 256MB 3D Graphics Card for Games and Demonstrations, 1GB Memory, DirectX 10. )”
I couldn’t help but think how this technology might be hacked to aid in Hemi-Sync research, or even with programs and program participants at TMI. I also think it’d be great for home use data and experiential verification. If you can record the headset data with a time stamp and correlate that with the timing of the taped exercises of a gateway Voyage CD, you can actually see when you have reached established brain wave activities conducive to non-physical reality experiences.