On the surface, Cheok's projects are fun, almost throwaway. "I've worked on hugging pyjamas," he says. "They consist of a suit you can put on your body to virtually hug someone, remotely.
Then we have these small haptic rings; if I squeeze my ring someone else will feel a squeeze on theirs through the internet - like a remote sensation of hand-holding."
He's also been working on a device with electrodes that excites taste receptors on the tongue, producing an artificial sensation of taste in the brain.
In the shorter term, the applications of these devices seem slightly frivolous; Cheok's rings, for example, are being turned into a product that the music industry plans to sell to fans. "You go to the concert," he says, "the pop star would send a special message, and if you're wearing the ring you'd get a squeeze on your finger." I grimace slightly, and he laughs.
"Fortunately or unfortunately," he says, "that's where they've decided that the money is - but we need to explore the boundaries of how these things can be used, because scientists and inventors can't think of all the possibilities. For example, Thomson Reuters has been in touch to ask about using the rings to send tactile information about stock prices or currency movements."
Our transition to an internet of all the senses is evidently dependent on the breadth of information that can be conveyed from one person to another as a series of zeroes and ones. "You have to find a way of, say, transmitting smell digitally, without using a sachet," says Cheok. "So I'm working with a French neuroscientist, Olivier Oullier, on a device which can produce an artificial sensation of smell through magnetic actuation. The olfactory bulb in our nasal cavity that's responsible for smell can be stimulated by pulsing magnetic fields. So this is about directly exciting the brain's neural path by bypassing the external sensor - in this case the human body."
This immediately plunges us into what seems like incredibly futuristic territory, where brains are communicating sensory information directly with other brains across digital networks. But it's already been demonstrated by the synthetic neurobiology group at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) that optical fibre can be connected to neurons, and Cheok is excited about where this may lead in the relatively short term. "We will have direct connection to the brain within our lifetime," he says, "although what level that will be I'm not sure. Physical stimulation of neurons may not produce the effects that we would hope for and predict."
Few of us can conceive of the pace with which technological power is developing. Ray Kurzweil (author, futurist, and a director of engineering at Google) predicts that by 2025 we'll have a computer which has the processing power of the human brain, and by 2045 it'll have the processing power of six billion brains - ie, everyone on the planet. Cheok sees these as hugely important tipping points for society. "If you're able to download your brain to a computer, there are major philosophical questions that we'll have to deal with in the next 30 years, such as whether we're human, or whether we're computers."
Society will also have to work out how it's going to handle the hyper-connectivity of a multisensory internet - bearing in mind that we can already become deeply frustrated by the few kilobytes of information contained within the average overloaded email inbox. Text messages that are not replied to already provoke consternation - what about unreciprocated touches, provocative odours or unwanted tastes?
"Our brains haven't changed to cope with infinite communication," says Cheok. "We don't have a mechanism for knowing when there's too much, in the way that we do when we've eaten too much food."
Marshall McLuhan, the Canadian philosopher of communication theory, famously used the term "global village" to describe the effect of connected media upon the world's population; Cheok believes that new sensory-communication channels will demonstrate how prescient that prediction was. "For most of human history, we didn't have privacy," he says.
"Everyone knew who was doing what. And these developments will mean that we become more and more open - the end of secrecy, almost bringing us back to the way that life used to be in hunter-gatherer times. Except, of course, it's now global."
The implications of the work of Cheok and his contemporaries seem to sit midway between exciting and terrifying, but in the shorter term it's about focusing on relatively mundane objectives, such as emitting multiple odours from a smartphone. "People will get used to this new mode of communication," says Cheok, "and develop new languages. We don't yet have a language of smell, or of touch; exactly the same pressure in terms of a touch can have a completely different response in the brain, depending on context. But combined with emotion and the subconscious, it'll bring a heightened sense of presence. I want us to be able to eat together across the internet. I've no idea what that will feel like," he adds, smiling, "but I've always believed that human communication goes far beyond the logical."
- Independent