FIDE Treasurer and Women’s World Champion Zhu Chen, together with WIM Liang Zhihua, attended the “Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) Clinical Application Symposium” on June 11, as special guests at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen (CUHK-Shenzhen).
Chess has long been associated with intelligence and human creativity.
FIDE representatives and chess players were invited to attend an event that brought together leading neurologists, clinicians, and technology companies working on brain-computer interface systems.
At first glance, chess may seem an unusual guest at a medical symposium.
Yet over the past year, the game has emerged as one of the clearest demonstrations of what brain-computer interface technology can achieve.
FIDE Treasurer and Women’s World Champion Zhu Chen, together with WIM Liang Zhihua, attended the “Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) Clinical Application Symposium” on June 11, as special guests at The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen (CUHK-Shenzhen).
Chess has long been associated with intelligence and human creativity. Increasingly, the game is finding its place at the cutting edge of brain science.
FIDE representatives and chess players were invited to attend an event that brought together leading neurologists, clinicians, and technology companies working on brain-computer interface systems. At first glance, chess may seem an unusual guest at a medical symposium. Yet over the past year, the game has emerged as one of the clearest demonstrations of what brain-computer interface technology can achieve.