Overview
- The companies announced at CES a plan to integrate Neurable’s non-invasive brain-computer interface into HyperX headphones, which remain a prototype with no model, price, or ship date disclosed.
- EEG sensors embedded in the earcups feed an AI model that gauges focus and stress to power a visual neurofeedback drill called Prime.
- In a CES Aimlabs demo observed by ZDNET, a tester improved from 33,333 points, 75.5% accuracy, and 478ms reaction time to 39,405 points, 83.3% accuracy, and 437ms after using Prime.
- Neurable cites a preliminary study showing everyday gamers cut reaction time by 43ms, increased accuracy by 0.53 percentage points, and hit about nine more targets, with bigger gains reported for collegiate and professional players.
- A companion app is planned to flag slipping attention, suggest breaks, and track stress, recovery, and cognitive strain for players and coaches.