A haunted house attraction in a Japanese theme park has turned to electronics
to give its visitors an extra fright this Halloween. The Hell’s Inn in Tokyo
boasts the usual fearsome ranks of ghouls and spectres—but also measures
how well you stand up to their scare tactics. On entering the
computer-controlled hell, visitors are given a handheld device that can be
activated by infrared signals. As they move through the haunted house, dodging
chilling favourites such as the eyeball-for-a-head fiend, the device vibrates
violently at various points, startling the already petrified guest. Pulse rates
are measured at the entrance and exit, and from the difference one’s “cowardice
level” is calculated—complete with a paper read-out to take away.
More from New ¾«¶«´«Ã½
Explore the latest news, articles and features

Mathematics
Mathematical AI helps researchers crack 50-year-old problem
News

Mathematics
Start-ups are racing to revolutionise mathematics with AI
News

Health
3D-printed lymph nodes could widen access to CAR T-cell therapy
News

Environment
'The book is in the future, but everything is seeded from our present'
Culture
Popular articles
Trending New ¾«¶«´«Ã½ articles
1
Does gravity create reality? A shocking path to a theory of everything
2
How a radical new view of life could reveal its origin – and aliens
3
Embryos made without sperm or eggs reveal why many pregnancies fail
4
First quantum grandfather clock could probe where gravity comes from
5
The day quantum computers break the internet
6
Earliest use of anaesthetics uncovered in Chinese doctor’s tomb
7
New ¾«¶«´«Ã½ recommends Turi King's expert book about DNA's secrets
8
We may finally know why gold stays so shiny
9
Millions of planets might form around supermassive black holes
10
'The book is in the future, but everything is seeded from our present'