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Desktop computers to counsel users to make better decisions.
Sandia National Lab ^ | January 22, 2004 | Press Release

Posted on 02/01/2004 10:26:29 PM PST by endthematrix

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — That computer on your desk is just your helper. But soon it may become a very close friend.

Now it sends your e-mails, links you to the Web, does your computations, and pays your bills.

Soon it could warn you when you’re talking too much at a meeting, if scientists at Sandia National Laboratories’ Advanced Concepts Group have their way.

Or it could alert others in your group to be attentive when you have something important to say.

Aided by tiny sensors and transmitters called a PAL (Personal Assistance Link) your machine (with your permission) will become an anthroscope — an investigator of your up-to-the-moment vital signs, says Sandia project manager Peter Merkle. It will monitor your perspiration and heartbeat, read your facial expressions and head motions, analyze your voice tones, and correlate these to keep you informed with a running account of how you are feeling — something you may be ignoring — instead of waiting passively for your factual questions. It also will transmit this information to others in your group so that everyone can work together more effectively.

“We’re observing humans by using a lot of bandwidth across a broad spectrum of human activity,” says Merkle, who uses a Tom Clancy-based computer game played jointly by four to six participants to develop a baseline understanding of human response under stress.

“If someone’s really excited during the game and that’s correlated with poor performance, the machine might tell him to slow down via a pop-up message,” says Merkle. “On the other hand, it might tell the team leader, ‘Take Bill out of loop, we don’t want him monitoring the space shuttle today. He’s had too much coffee and too little sleep. Sally, though, is giving off the right signals to do a great job.’”

The idea of the devices has occasioned some merry feedback, as from a corporate executive who emailed, “Where do we get the version that tells people they are boring in meetings? Please hurry and send that system to us. A truck full or two should cover us.”

More seriously, preliminary results on five people interacting in 12 sessions beginning Aug. 18 indicate that personal sensor readings caused lower arousal states, improved teamwork and better leadership in longer collaborations. A lowered arousal state — the amount of energy put into being aware — is preferable in dealing competently with continuing threat.

The focus behind the $200,000 effort, funded by Sandia’s Laboratory-Directed Research and Development program, is to map the characteristics that correlate to “personal-best” performances.

“The question is, how do we correlate what we observe with optimum performance, so that we improve your ability and the ability of your team leader to make decisions? He can’t tell, for example, that your pulse is racing. We’re extending his ability,” says Merkle.

Those concerned about privacy — who see this as an incursion similar to HAL’s, the supercomputer that took over the spaceship in the movie 2001 — can always opt out, he says, just like people choose not to respond to emails or decline to attend meetings.

But in a sense, he says, the procedure is no different from that followed by people who have heart problems: they routinely wear a monitor home to keep informed of their vital signs.

“In our game, what we learn from your vital signs can help you in the same way,” he says. “It’s almost absurd on its face to think you can’t correlate physiological behavior with the day’s competence.”

After gaining generic maps of individual performance, the information would be linked in a working group through a program called Mentor.

No theory yet exists to explain why or how optimal group performances will be achieved through more extensive computer linkages. But Merkle doesn’t think he needs one.

“Some people think you have to start with a theory. Darwin didn’t go with a theory. He went where his subjects were and started taking notes. Same here,” he says. Merkle presented a paper on his group’s work at the NASA Human Performance conference Oct. 28-29 in Houston. “Before we knew that deep-ocean hydrothermal vents existed, we had complex theories about what governed the chemistry of the oceans. They were wrong.”

Now it’s state-of-the-art to use EEG systems to link up brain events to social interactions, he says. “Let’s get the data and find out what’s real.”

The tools for such a project — accelerometers to measure motion, face-recognition software, EMGs to measure muscle activity, EKGs to measure heart beat, blood volume pulse oximetry to measure oxygen saturation, a Pneumotrace™ respiration monitor to measure breathing depth and rapidity — are all off-the-shelf items.

“We give off so much information. But our only current way of interacting with a computer is very limited: through, essentially, a keyboard and mouse. So the limitation of my computer’s ability to help me — this increasingly complex, wonderful machine with its ability to recognize intricate patterns — is its inability to recognize complex patterns in me.”

Is all this really necessary? He answers with some humor, “Not at all. You can always ride a horse; you don’t need an automatic transmission.”

Asked whether this mechanistic view of human behavior can be accurate when many athletes, scientists, and artists have described themselves as feeling poorly yet made unusual gains in their work, and polygraphers have been unable to locate spymasters based on similar reading of vital signs, Merkle replies: “I would not say that we have a mechanistic view, unless one considers studying precedent to be a mechanism. Based on a history of prior performance, we make a prediction on likelihood of suitability for current tasks. It’s no different from making decisions based on baseball statistics: against left-handed batters in the last 200 night games, this person hits .207, so pinch hit the .298 person for him.”

Further work is anticipated in joint projects between Sandia and the University of New Mexico, and also with Caltech.

“In 2004 we intend to integrate simultaneous four-person 128-channel EEG recording,” says Merkle, “correlating brain events, physiologic dynamics, and social phenomena to develop assistive methods to improve group and individual performance.”

To complement this applied research, Sandia is supporting a $50,000 graduate fellowship to study the neurology of learning processes under the Caltech Campus Executive program.

The Sandia project teamed with small business to produce the apparatus. Dave Warner, Steve Birch, and Tim Murphy of MindTel LLC, of Syracuse, N.Y., delivered the prototype with off-the-shelf components and custom software, based on an inexpensive networked PC platform, under budget in only 71 days, says Merkle.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: ai; computer; darpa; nationallabs; sandia; techindex
END THE MATRIX
1 posted on 02/01/2004 10:26:31 PM PST by endthematrix
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To: endthematrix
...and I thought the talking paperclip was annoying.
2 posted on 02/01/2004 10:33:27 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: *tech_index
Bump
3 posted on 02/01/2004 10:42:07 PM PST by endthematrix (To enter my lane you must use your turn signal!)
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To: endthematrix

4 posted on 02/01/2004 10:44:38 PM PST by Nick Danger ( With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.)
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: Nick Danger
:^D

LOL~!
6 posted on 02/01/2004 10:46:53 PM PST by Freedom2specul8 (Please pray for our troops.... http://anyservicemember.navy.mil/)
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To: dr_who_2
You were right, too. Eventually, they'll break down the resistance to having us tracked 24/7 with implants. Then it will start getting to serious Revelations time.
7 posted on 02/01/2004 10:47:14 PM PST by Richard Kimball
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To: Richard Kimball
I don't believe in armageddon type stuff. Our fortunes could suddenly change due to explainable (but not necessarily controllable) circumstances. People who sit around fearing or hoping for an "end of the age" aren't doing anyone or themselves any good at all.
8 posted on 02/01/2004 11:06:03 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: dr_who_2
...and I thought the talking paperclip was annoying.

That was the exact same thing I thought when I saw this article!


Paperclip: "It looks like you are trying to make a decision..." Me: "Yeah. To be or not to be, that is, like, the question, innit?"
9 posted on 02/01/2004 11:06:52 PM PST by KangarooJacqui (3 out of 4 people ... are wondering what the other one's off doing.)
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To: Richard Kimball
...nor do I consider this an especially disturbing development. It's just another waste of taxpayer money, which is disturbing but typical.
10 posted on 02/01/2004 11:07:47 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: KangarooJacqui
Microsoft's design philosophy of "you didn't really want to do that; this is what you really wanted to do" is the thing about Windows that I detest the most aside from themes, adware, and brain-dead documentation. After over ten years of reinventing Unix/Amigas/VMS (poorly), the core OS seems alright. Unfortunately, the user rarely gets close enough to it.
11 posted on 02/01/2004 11:18:34 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: dr_who_2
Microsoft's design philosophy of "you didn't really want to do that; this is what you really wanted to do" is the thing about Windows that I detest the most

You're preaching to the choir on that score. And the most irritating thing? It seems to be harder and harder in each successive version of Windows to make that damn paperclip GO AWAY...
12 posted on 02/01/2004 11:23:05 PM PST by KangarooJacqui (3 out of 4 people ... make up 75% of the world's population)
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To: dr_who_2
Re: Not a especially disturbing development. "Aided by tiny sensors and transmitters called a PAL (Personal Assistance Link) your machine (with your permission) will become an anthroscope — an investigator of your up-to-the-moment vital signs, says Sandia project manager Peter Merkle."I like that emphasis: with your permission! This is the sister project to the Brain/machine interface. Do you think that attempts to integrate humans with machines is denigrates humans as a species?
13 posted on 02/01/2004 11:49:16 PM PST by endthematrix (To enter my lane you must use your turn signal!)
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To: endthematrix
No.
14 posted on 02/01/2004 11:52:46 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: dr_who_2
You are wrong. Man will cease to exist or become irrelevant or slave. Then again I always see the glass half empty. People interested try kurzeilai.net about Accelerating Intelligence
15 posted on 02/02/2004 12:15:21 AM PST by endthematrix (To enter my lane you must use your turn signal!)
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To: endthematrix
Well Intel is doing its part - the new Prescott is out today:

Prescott Arrives : ( New Intel Pentium finally ...)

16 posted on 02/02/2004 12:20:26 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: endthematrix
Let's hope a liberal doesn't program them.
17 posted on 02/02/2004 2:43:32 AM PST by Caipirabob (Democrats.. Socialists..Commies..Traitors...Who can tell the difference?)
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To: endthematrix
"He’s had too much coffee and too little sleep. "

That's when I do my best work!
18 posted on 02/02/2004 2:11:05 PM PST by Tauzero (A slight squeeze on the hooter is an excellent safety precaution)
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