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Manoeuvring around Second Life made easy

— Photo: AP

NEW MODES: A student demonstrates the brain-computer interface technology.

TOKYO: You can always spot the novices in the virtual reality world of Second Life: Their online characters — or avatars — stumble around awkwardly and walk into objects, as their real-world users fumble with the keyboard controls.

Now, technology from Japan could help make navigating online virtual worlds simpler by letting players use their own bodies — or even brain waves — to control their avatars.

Take the new position-tracking system developed by Tokyo University, which uses a mat printed with colourful codes and an ordinary Web camera that is strapped to the user to calculate his or her position in three dimensions. The user turns left, and the avatar turns left. The user crouches down, and the avatar follows.

“This technology lets you use take the actions you’d use in real life and transpose them to the virtual world,” said research leader Michitaka Hirose. “It could make manoeuvring much, much easier.”

Second Life, the virtual universe run by San Francisco-based Linden Lab, boasts more than 11 million registered users worldwide. People can design online characters that meet and chat with other avatars, go shopping or party.

But the online world is not as easy as the real world to navigate — especially for beginners.

At a recent demonstration in Tokyo, researcher Katsunori Tanaka strapped a Web camera to his hip, lens down, and walked around on a large mat with specially coded patterns on it. On a large screen was the computer graphic-generated three-dimensional world of his avatar.

As Mr. Tanaka moved across the mat, the view on the screen shifted perspective. When he crouched to peer under a virtual parked car, the image swerved to show what his avatar would “see”: the vehicle’s underside.

The system can track movements in 3-D because as the user moves, the patterns on the mat change from the camera’s perspective and the images can be processed to calculate vertical distance and tilt, Mr. Hirose said.

Across Tokyo at Keio University, another research team is offering a virtual experience that reaches even more deeply into the user.

Junichi Ushiba’s technology monitors brain activity so players can make their avatars move in Second Life just by thinking of commands like forward, right or left. The interface uses electrodes attached to the user’s scalp to sense activity in the brain’s sensory-motor cortex, which controls body motions, according to Mr. Ushiba. Software then translates the brain activity into signals that control the avatar.

The technology can detect what a user is thinking because when people imagine moving their right arm, the brain’s left hemisphere is activated — and vice versa.

“The difficult part is to stop thinking,” said research student Takashi Ono as he made his avatar stroll through a virtual Tokyo neighbourhood in Second Life.

“I want to go left, so I think, ‘left’ — but then the avatar turns too far to the left before I can get rid of the command in my head,” he said. — AP

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