Lol, the best kind. You should make a Tesla Coil have it zap to a tune and shock your brain on a rhythm. Transcranial intracerebral deep stimulation the 8bit midi edition.
They do make some sort of at-home TMS devices, not sure how well they would work. The one I'm getting is called NeuroStar. No side effects besides fatigue and occasional headache.
Originally posted by Sophie
Lol, the best kind. You should make a Tesla Coil have it zap to a tune and shock your brain on a rhythm. Transcranial intracerebral deep stimulation the 8bit midi edition.
The following users say it would be alright if the author of this
post didn't die in a fire!
You know those weird caps they have when you go for an EKG the brain one not the heart one. Think you could drive a pattern of pulses through that thing with a hardweeno?
Originally posted by Sophie
You know those weird caps they have when you go for an EKG the brain one not the heart one. Think you could drive a pattern of pulses through that thing with a hardweeno?
you'd control the pulse by setting up a specific capacitor configuration, then control the voltage/current into it
you'd probably use relays or mosfets to turn power on or off, but they have a certain resolution so they're not the best idea for trying to modulate pulses themselves. once you dial in the signal you need with the caps and power supply you mostly just need a control system. could do it with a hand switch and/or a 555 circuit but with a weeno you could do things like a dead man's switch, have it turn off after a few seconds if you seize or pass out, post alerts to someone, raise or lower voltage over time, etc.
That's the heart one. Also if you're gonna use transistors of any kind you gotta pay attention to the spill over voltage. The ones i use to switch 9 and 12 volt circuits stop being functional semi-conductors when you're getting up to the V60+ range. They just forget they're supposed to be semi-conductors. Obviously depending on the transistor your mileage may vary.
Relays introduce unnecessary complexity. Even though if you set up a relay for every electrode and start to drive the circuit it's going to clickity clack very satisfyingly, it's not an ideal solution. Although a very fun sounding one.