By
Mark Prigg
|
The Aurora smart headband contains lights and plays sounds that its maker says allows the wearer to influence their dreams.
Software in the $175 band knows when you dream by measuring brainwave and eye-movement activity, while also tracking body movements.
By programming the device before you fall asleep, it is believed the gadget can give wearers deeper sleep with more vivid dreams – and can even wake you up at the perfect time.
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The real-life inception headband that lets you control your dreams through an accompanying app, thanks to sounds and LED lights that flash
HOW IT WORKS
Software in the $175 band knows when you are falling asleep by measuring brainwave and eye-movement activity, while also tracking body movements.
Once it detects this, a series of red, green and blue LEDs are flashed in preprogrammed sequences, while playing music the user chooses.
The LED lights also act as visual cues while in your dream, to allow the user to realize that