Sands Research: Faster EEG for Neuromarketing

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In what it terms a “neuromarketing breakthrough,” Sands Research has announced the development of a higher speed EEG brain wave monitoring system. The new setup uses a high-density array of EEG sensors capable of measuring activity 10,000 times per second. This hardware is combined with proprietary software to analyze brain activity.

“We are pleased to advance the knowledge in this field and demonstrate that the use of EEG application is the only technology presently available that can maintain real-time data acquisition at the speed the brain functions.” stated Sands. “With this release, we collect EEG data at five times the speed of systems utilized by NeuroFocus, our nearest competitor and others in the field.”

“Additionally, this advancement in sample rate technology allowed us to implement new signal processing algorithms with the ability to eliminate artifact coming from muscle and eye-related movements. [That is] a key issue for potentially corrupting EEG data collection.” continued Sands.

Sands claims to be “only fully vertically integrated, whole head EEG systems manufacturer in the neuromarketing field.” They make the conductive gel, the EEG cap, the data acquisition hardware and software, and the final analysis/reporting software. (Full press release.)

While this increase in speed sounds impressive, the exact implications for the neuromarketing industry aren’t clear. Academic research has yet to demonstrate the effectiveness of either EEG or fMRI brain scan technology for improving ads or products, so whether a higher sampling rate will greatly improve accuracy of predicted behavior is hard to say. Indeed, the neuromarketing industry and academic research in neuroeconomics have diverged in approach. The major neuromarketing practitioners have gravitated to EEG technology, which allows high sampling rates and simultaneous testing of multiple subjects. Academic “mind readers” like Loewenstein and Just at Carnegie Mellon University have been using fMRI, which allows 3-dimensional imaging of brain activity but uses costly and restrictive machines and offers lower spatial and temporal resolution.

Overall, though, the Sands development is consistent with Ray Kurzweil’s prediction in The Singularity is Near; the futurist anticipates exponential improvement in brain imaging resolution for the next few decades.

3 Comments
  1. Gener D. Maylem says

    I am a neurologist.I am recently into corporate neurology. I am interested in this research breakthrough. Do you offer Fellowship training program about this. Are there any institutions offering this programs. I am very much interested. Thanks.

  2. Carl Frog says

    This is hilarious, but it’s not a breakthrough.
    There are no significant measurable signals related to meaningful brain activity in the range above 100Hz. Sampling faster can be done in research without problems, but it isn’t being done because it makes no sense whatsoever. It actually decreases your signal to noise ratio, and produces huge amounts of data which take more space and more time to analyze.
    Everyone who has ever done a single EEG experiment in academic research HAS to see that this is total BS…(funny enough, on their website, they reference 1000 Hz stationary and 256 Hz mobile, which is what I’d use, too)

    1. Roger Dooley says

      Carl, at the moment there are no serious academic studies validating the use of EEG to gauge consumer response to ads or products. The good news is that such studies are underway at a couple of universities, and we should see some published work in the coming year or two.

      Roger

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