However, RNGs are not capable of controlling functional and practical applications such as prosthetic hands, flight controllers or communication systems. In 2002, Bob Plotke and Ted Klouzal began discussions about the efficacy of mentally affecting events at the subatomic level and measuring those effects to produce control data for electronic devices.īob combined his abilities in data analysis with Ted’s abilities to design and build electronic systems to produce the first subatomic-source signal that could measure changes in signal coherence, in response to directed mental intention.Īt the time, the standard devices used in mind-interface research were Random Number Generators (RNGs).