That Very Quinn has Moved a changé de compte pour @InkAndCircuits@cybre.space :
2e6a0addaa40a386

That Very Quinn has Moved @ThatVeryQuinn@witches.town

I want to learn how to play all of Fleetwood Mac's Tusk. Esp. the Rhythm section.

Blood, Medical Talk Afficher plus

Blood, Medical Talk Afficher plus

"I wonder if I can find decent literature on using biometric data to track emotions."

Ogilvy.com

I don't know what I expected.

@MightyPork Close. It detects the oxygen saturation of the wearer.

I do not pretend that my ideas are new, quite the opposite in fact. It's good that the tech is already being used. I just need to hack theirs and/or build my own version.

BUuuUt

I can gather three types of human sensory feedback data as well as self reporting. This should suffice for my purposes, unless I can find another concept for a wearable I can make that would add to my data points.

If it sounds like I'm a Psych student who switched majors, it's because I am.

A clinical setting is not feasible for my studies, as I want to learn about my own capacity for emotional response (and those of willing participants) day to day, for my AI project as well as a study on emotional intelligence and regulation for my own personal use.

This project is getting more ambitious as time goes on, but I AM LOVING IT.

SO.

I think I just added another layer of biometric data to follow for my emotions-tracker project. That is, if it has any bearing - though I might be able to test that, too!

Pulse Oximetry.

There's actually literature on the plausibility of a pulse oximetry ring (They made one!) that can be worn from day to day. SO! I can make one and use that as another datapoint.

Well mastodon might have its issues but at least it didnt emperil democracy

Disability talk Afficher plus

HoH thoughts Afficher plus

I also saw a really interesting technology for paralyzed folks to communicate using their eyes and a computer program being built by someone on hackaday.

@MightyPork I getcha, and yeah pretty much, haha.

I think the idea is that humans are naturally drawn to augmenting ourselves using tools, ergo cyborg is a natural state of being for us. But then I'm probably butchering this.

@MightyPork I believe there is a movement within the transhumanist circles to understand cyborgs as people who use tools to augment their daily lives. Idk, I sort of think that's a more apt description, since under the present definition it excludes hearing aids and other assistive technologies people use day to day.

Disability talk Afficher plus

Disability talk Afficher plus