PiEEG Kit Makes Neuroscience Available to Makers and Students

PiEEG Kit Makes Neuroscience Available to Makers and Students

In a world where wearable tech is tracking every heartbeat and step, a new tool is redefining how we interact with our biology. Meet the PiEEGKit – a compact, open-source bioscience lab you can carry in your backpack. Designed for students, researchers, tech enthusiasts, and curious minds alike, this innovative device puts brain and body signals into your hands—literally.

The brain is our command center, controlling everything from our thoughts to our movements. Yet for most people, it remains a mystery. PiEEG is changing that. This all-in-one kit allows users to measure and explore signals from their brain (EEG), heart (EKG), muscles (EMG), and eyes (EOG) in real time, using a simple, intuitive interface.

Born from necessity, the PiEEG project was founded by Ildar Rakhmatulin, a UK-based scientist and brain-computer interface (BCI) specialist. Frustrated by the lack of affordable and accessible tools for biosignal research, he built his solution using a Raspberry Pi and open-source principles. What started as a DIY project quickly grew into a global community of developers, educators, and innovators. Today, PiEEG is used in universities, by startup founders, and by individuals exploring everything from meditation to robotics.

PiEEG Kit is the next evolution of that vision

More than just a gadget, the PiEEG Kit is a fully integrated learning tool. It includes a Raspberry Pi, a 9-inch touchscreen, a sensor board, and all necessary electrodes for full-body biosignal measurement. Each component comes pre-configured, so users can dive straight into experiments, whether they’re building brain-controlled devices or just learning how the heart responds to stress. It even includes a Python-based course for signal processing, empowering users to analyze their biodata with professional tools.

The potential uses are as vast as the imagination. Researchers can test ideas in the field, not just in labs. Startups can validate concepts quickly. Machine learning engineers can collect real-time datasets for algorithm training. Students can study biology and computing in a tangible, exciting way. And anyone can experiment with how their brainwaves shift during meditation, stress, or focus.

Though it’s not a medical device and cannot be used for diagnostics, the PiEEG Kit offers deep insights into how our bodies work—and opens the door to meaningful self-exploration.

What sets PiEEG apart is its open-source foundation. All software, data formats, and design files are publicly available, allowing users to build, share, and collaborate. The company even features user-generated projects across its social platforms, from 3D-printed EEG headsets to robotic hands controlled by brainwaves. This community-driven approach fuels continuous innovation and makes bioscience more inclusive.

Video

The PiEEG Kit is currently in its final development phase, and a campaign is underway to fund final software improvements and scale production. Backers will help democratize neuroscience and may just inspire the next breakthrough in brain-computer technology.

Compact, powerful, and surprisingly fun, the PiEEG Kit invites everyone to learn, experiment, and create. It’s not just a product—it’s a movement toward understanding ourselves in a deeper, data-driven way.

Welcome to the world of bioscience. Your brain is the controller—what will you do with it?

Resources:

Please follow and like us:
Pin Share
About mixos

Mike is the founder and editor of Electronics-Lab.com, an electronics engineering community/news and project sharing platform. He studied Electronics and Physics and enjoys everything that has moving electrons and fun. His interests lying on solar cells, microcontrollers and switchmode power supplies. Feel free to reach him for feedback, random tips or just to say hello :-)

view all posts by admin
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Get new posts by email:
Get new posts by email:

Join 97,426 other subscribers

Archives