A Phase I study was undertaken to test the feasibility of using forehead biopotentials for brain actuated computer control. Findings indicate that operators are able to use their forehead biopotentials for both continuous and intermittent computer control. Operators reported an immediate sense of control, performed successfully within minutes and improved with training. The measurement site was easy to access and reliable signals were always obtained. In other studies operators were able to demonstrate simultaneous independent control of at least two control signals derived from the single forehead signal. Continuous and intermittent control with under 0.2 second response times were measured. The Phase I findings indicate that the approach is feasible. Therefore the following Phase II effort, designed to transition the technology to a preproduction prototype, is proposed. Physiological modelling, based upon literature review and experiments, will be performed. Results will identify forehead biopotential sources and will be used for task sensitive controller design. A dry electrode system will be developed. A low noise bioamplifier/microcontroller signal acquisition system will be developed. An operator controller interface, using a system theoretic/task sensitive approach drawing upon human operator manual control and decision making results, will be developed. An automatic interface adjustment scheme, sensitive to individual operator characteristics, will be implemented.