KEY POINTS
  • CES featured several products that let you control apps, games and devices with your mind.
  • The technology holds a lot of promise for gaming, entertainment and even medicine.
  • NextMind and FocusOne were two of the companies that showed off mind-control technology at CES this year.

LAS VEGAS — It's not the self-driving cars, flying cars or even the dish-washing robots that stick out as the most transformative innovation at this year's Consumer Electronics Show: It's the wearable gadgets that can read your mind.

There's a growing category of companies focused on the "Brain-Computer Interface." These devices can record brain signals from sensors on the scalp (or even devices implanted within the brain) and translate them into digital signals. This industry is expected to reach $1.5 billion this year, with the technology used for everything from education and prosthetics, to gaming and smart home control.