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Input Devices Technology

Demo of a New "Sixth Sense" Technology 187

TEDChris writes "Here's an intriguing attempt at a versatile new tech device that tries to augment the wearer's five senses. It comes out of Patty Maes's group at the MIT Media Lab. By combining a computerized personal projector with a camera and linking both to the Net, a host of surprising new applications becomes possible. This 8-minute demo created a lot of buzz at TED last month and was posted online today. Would love to know what the Slashdot community makes of it."
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Demo of a New "Sixth Sense" Technology

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  • I guess (Score:3, Informative)

    by oodaloop ( 1229816 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @02:52PM (#27138721)
    this sixth sense doesn't help to identify dupes, since this, or something very much like this, was just on /. a few weeks ago.
  • by JustinOpinion ( 1246824 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @02:59PM (#27138833)

    I, as a typical human, have plenty more than five senses. I would have hoped that people's understanding of their own body would have continued past grade-school.

    Yup. This is a pet-peeve of mine, too. Humans have between 9-16 senses [wikipedia.org] (or more), depending on how you want to count/divide them. The "5 senses" idea dates back to Aristotle... and we've learned quite a bit about the world and the human body since then. Frankly it's ridiculous that even in grade school children are told that humans have 5 senses: it's patently false. And it's quite easy to demonstrate otherwise (e.g. ask a person if they can sense which way is down).

    It bugs me to no end that these kinds of basic science mistakes are repeated ad nauseum.

  • by macraig ( 621737 ) <mark.a.craig@gmaFREEBSDil.com minus bsd> on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @03:13PM (#27139103)

    I already know how to augment a person's senses: it's called SID (Sensory Integration Disorder). Anyone with SID is automatically the proverbial canary in the coal mine. Doesn't require any awkward paraphernalia, either, just a few rearranged genes! You probably already know one of these SID people, like the guy who screams at the neighborhood kids to stop that infernal racket!

  • by DrLang21 ( 900992 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @03:28PM (#27139337)
    I did. Looks like a specialized PDA with internet access. We were supposed to have hand held devices that would do similar things with RFID tags by now. If that can't make it to the market, this stands no chance. I predict that the technology is far too expensive for a consumer device.
  • by edelholz ( 1098395 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @03:42PM (#27139563)

    She said that the components cost about $350 as is.

  • by MozeeToby ( 1163751 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @03:43PM (#27139579)

    1 & 2. Brightness and Color
    3. Hearing
    4. Pressure
    5. Pain
    6. Temperature
    7. Smell
    8-13. The different Taste Receptors
    14. Balance/acceleration
    15. Proprioception - Knowing where your body parts are. If you don't believe this is a sense check out the Pinocchio Illusion
    16. Vasodilation in the skin (blushing)
    17. Sensing a full bladder/bowels
    18. Intestinal discomfort (not actually pressure nerves, that's just how your body perceives them)

  • by Curtman ( 556920 ) * on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @03:44PM (#27139585)

    I did. Looks like a specialized PDA with internet access.

    Yeah, just like that except you aren't holding a PDA in your hands, it's projecting on to surfaces that you are looking at.

    I predict that the technology is far too expensive for a consumer device.

    Again, I predict that you didn't watch the video. They built it with "off the shelf" parts for $350.

  • Surprising? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Alrescha ( 50745 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @04:02PM (#27139867)

    "a host of surprising new applications becomes possible"

    Surprising? New?

    No. Please read some Vernor Vinge. To stay on topic, I recommend "Fast Times at Fairmont High", which covers the concept of augmented reality quite well. Someone wake me when technology catches up to that.

    That said, I think it's wonderful that someone is working on it.

    A.

  • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <[ten.frow] [ta] [todhsals]> on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @04:05PM (#27139921)

    And you won't have to imagine someone without their clothes. You can just turn on the mode which shows everyone like they would sans theirs clothes. And if you get caught doing that, you also risk getting killed, in which case you will not only be able to see dead people, you'll become one with them. Yippie.

    Wasn't there a Sony camcorder over a decade ago that could do this?

    ISTR that it was recalled due to its "night vision" mode turning into more like "x-ray vision", except stopping at just under the clothes... I wonder how many cameras were actually returned, and how many were re-sold to others who wanted that particular feature.

  • by holophrastic ( 221104 ) on Tuesday March 10, 2009 @04:24PM (#27140227)

    Pain, proprioception, thermoception, orientation, direction, acceleration, balance, . . .
    Ever seen a cop perform a field-sobriety test? You know, before breathalizers? It specifically tests balance and proprioception -- stand on one leg, eyes closed, and touch your nose. The only way it tests any of your five is because you need to hear the cop speak the directions.

    Build a robot, or design any physical machine, and see how many "sensors" you need before it can do anything. Your laser printer has a dozen sensors just to align the paper!

    In my world, possibly the same as yours, "grade-school" is indeed hyphenated; in part because it is a unified term. In "grade school", "grade" is an adjective where "school" is a noun. In such syntax, "grade" modifies "school". I was not referring to a school on a hill, or to school which teaches about grading. Now, I was talking about a school which is gradual, and hence "grade school" would have worked, I was not referring to the entire academic system in which education is taught gradually. I was referring to the subset of years consisting of grades 1 through 6(ish), commonly coined "grade-school".

    Similarly, I could have used "elementary-school", however "elementary school" would have been a school that teaches the periodic table, or the basic elements of some other industry.

    See, "adjective noun" is a general form of English, where each word is considered according to its individual definition. "adjective-noun" is a specific form of English, where the compound-word (or "compounded word", because "compound" is a noun, and "compounded" is the adjective here) is considered according to a non-Englist lexicon, often industry-specific jargon.

    They taught me your way in grade-school, when they told me that I was in grade school. That's my point. My education continued beyond grade-school where I learned that I had not only attended grade school but I had also attended grade-school; and I learned the important distinction.

    But I'll ask you the same question I ask of people who argue "whom" versus "who". "How many times have you said the word 'whom' in the last year?" Many of them realize that they've never used it, and that's when they realize that they must be making some mistake. So in your case, when was the last time you used a hyphen? If you answer is unreasonable, then clearly you aren't utilizing the entire English language properly.

    A lot of people have been dropping hyphens over the last sixty years -- twice my life-time. But hey, people say "there's five of them over there" because they don't seem to realize how ignorant and hick-town it sounds when expanded to "there is five . . .".

  • Re:Sixth Sense (Score:4, Informative)

    by SenseiLeNoir ( 699164 ) on Wednesday March 11, 2009 @08:36AM (#27148721)

    The only issue i have is that there is actually already more than five senses in the human body.

    In addition to:
    - Sight
    - Hearing
    - Taste
    - Smell
    - Touch

    There is:

    - Balance and acceleration
    - Temperature
    - Kinesthetic sense (the part of the brain that tells the position of various parts of our limbs. Previously this was thought to be related to touch, but its been found in weightlessness, our brains can still "sense" the position of our limbs.)
    - Pain (different to touch, as pain can exist without touch.

    There are also other senses used for respiratory, etc.

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