Carsickness impairs comfort and affects a large proportion of the population. However, interventions that provide a therapeutic solution to carsickness have yet to be established. Here we introduce a wearable mindfulness meditation brain-computer interface (MM-BCI) system as a closed-loop training therapy for carsickness. The system records electroencephalographic activity, decodes meditative state in real time and delivers audiovisual neurofeedback to scaffold meditation practice. In a 10-week randomized controlled trial, 60 individuals susceptible to carsickness were assigned to practice mindfulness meditation with either real-time MM-BCI neurofeedback or sham feedback, both during real-world car riding and at home. Critically, pre-intervention, post-intervention, and one-month follow-up assessments of carsickness severity were conducted during regular car riding without any task or feedback system. Relative to the sham group, the MM-BCI group showed significantly reduced carsickness severity at post-intervention and follow-up. At baseline, carsickness-susceptible participants exhibited a reduced aperiodic exponent in occipito-parietal cortex relative to non-susceptible controls, identifying a candidate neural signature of carsickness susceptibility. MM-BCI training increased this exponent toward non-susceptible levels, and the magnitude of this neural normalization was associated with the degree of symptom improvement. This study provides the first demonstration that BCI-enhanced mindfulness meditation can induce promising treatment effect on carsickness, offering a transformative non-pharmacological approach to enhance passenger well-being in everyday transit.
Coming soon: 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now
Each year we compile our 10 Breakthrough Technologies list, featuring our educated predictions for which technologies will have the biggest impact on how we live


