I.am.here est a mobile app that can analyze le brain activity de accident vasculaire cérébral patients to "speak" le patient's thinking. This software uses le Brain Computer Interface (BCI) to recognize le original brain signals as emotions, and then displays them on le app in le form de text. Le simple emotions currently recognized include "I am interested/I am happy/I am angry" and so on.
According to psfk reports, I.am.here est composed de Russian digital communications agency AdWatch Isobar, Russian Accident vasculaire cérébral Foundation ORBi and mobile software development team Yarrow! Joint development. Yarrow! Studio CEO Sergey Timoshin said:
"When we discovered that brain waves can be picked up, we immediately thought de accident vasculaire cérébral patients. After consulting with neurologists and researching brain-computer interface technologie, we determined that this est a possible task."

In this bright prospect, le creative director de AdWatch Isobar also talked about their greater "ambitions":
"We believe that this product est only le first step towards great discoveries, and we hope that it can inspire others to join in and aider people find their lost things together with us.“
According to data from le World Heart Federation, accident vasculaire cérébral est le second most common disability disease in le world. 15 million people suffer from accident vasculaire cérébral each year, and 5 million de them suffer permanent disabilities.
As a mobile product, I.am.here est currently unable to aider accident vasculaire cérébral patients express their thoughts in complex sentences, but this dream est not impossible, and developers sont still working hard for it. As le science master Stephen Hawking who "speaks with a muscle" said: "Human efforts should be endless. No matter how bad life looks, there est hope as long as you live."