Poppy Crum: Technology that knows what you're feeling
波碧·克文: 科技洞悉你的感受
Poppy Crum builds technologies that best leverage human physiology to enhance our experiences and how we interact with the world. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
knows more about us than we do?
會發生甚麼事呢?
our slightest facial microexpressions
between a real smile and a fake one.
incredibly intelligent
about our internal states.
parts of our inner lives
what's going on inside
什麼可被分享、什麼不可以。
over what we share and what we don't.
that I think that's a thing of the past.
我認為這種想法已經過時。
it's not necessarily a bad thing.
studying the circuits in the brain
realities that we each have.
of current technology
that does make us better,
losing some of our agency.
their internal experiences.
at the mechanistic interaction
to the world around them
like eating, mating
像是進食、交配
回應我們身邊的資訊。
to information in the world.
and their biological experiences.
I'm a violinist, not a singer.
given me a critical review.
tune their webs like violins
有些蜘蛛會調節自己的蜘蛛網,
of my voice as it went higher
of an echolocating bat or a bird,
蝙蝠或鳥的回聲定位。
to its external world
what's happening to its internal world.
the spider's response;
state on its sleeve.
over what people see, know and understand
our bluffs, our trials and tribulations --
我們的麻煩和艱難⋯⋯
to how hard your brain is working.
is driven entirely by mental effort
with changes in lighting.
the same thing as the subject in our lab,
眼睛會做相同的事,
而且定睛於你面前的眼睛。
and keep watching the eye in front of you.
and it should get really easy.
你可以看見心理因素的變化。
in the diameter of the pupil.
智能科技仰賴個人數據。
depends on personal data.
智能科技仰賴個人數據。
depends on personal data.
drives your pupil to dilate.
to understand the talkers
in different spatial locations,
over the reveal of our internal state
to make it really easy
that give us away.
paired with machine learning
tracking our external actions.
相機和麥克風而已。
of our physiology.
as infrared thermal images
and blues are cooler.
of our thermal response
we might be having
a picture of fire as if it were real.
people give off heat on their cheeks
our poker bluffs,
from someone's thermal response
of interpersonal interest?
in someone's thermal image
we fall in love and see attraction.
和偵測吸引力的新穎方式。
develop insights and make predictions
of our speech and language
語言節奏變化。
in the statistics of our language
someone will develop psychosis.
and changes in our voice
of different conditions.
the spectral coloration of our voice.
可改變聲音中的光譜顏色。
associated with Alzheimer's
than 10 years before clinical diagnosis.
tells a much richer story
could, if we let them,
isoprene and carbon dioxide
所組成的混合物成分,
when our muscles tense,
in our behaviors.
this clip with me.
on the side screens,
the image in the front
I needed to get a reaction.
我需要你們的反應。
you exhale in the room right now.
呼出的二氧化碳。
throughout the theater,
because CO2 is heavier than air.
to a device in the back
with high precision,
concentration of CO2.
the real-time data visualization
a patch of red on the screen,
with larger colored clouds,
where a lot of us jumped.
driving a change in carbon dioxide.
導致二氧化碳變化。
with me one more time.
when we changed the creator's intent.
差別會很大。
impact of that scene.
visually identifiable moments.
視覺上可以辨識的時刻。
of our emotions.
will know what we're feeling.
將會知道我們的情感。
than we ever have.
to the experience and sentiments
that true technological partners can bring
能夠帶來的能力,
and with our technology.
of becoming technological empaths,
達到同理心的力量,
the emotional and cognitive divide.
情感和認知的鴻溝。
how we tell our stories.
for technologies like augmented reality
創造更美好的未來,
and connect us at a much deeper level.
being able to realize
其實正經歷著艱難的日子。
really was having a deeply hard time,
a crucial, positive difference.
藉此得到關鍵且正向的結果。
to know the difference
a mental health crisis
the direct impact of their work.
能知曉其作品對人們的影響。
把自己的想法傳達給觀賞者。
on the other end.
what we're feeling.
it's art or human connection,
will know and can know
closer and more authentic.
have a really hard time
that people know things about us
their lives and about ours.
where our inner lives are ripped open
內心生活要被剖開的世界──
and our privacy given away
where we don't want to see it go.
each other more effectively,
someone is feeling something
from our technology.
can be used for good or bad.
and effective regulation
to building the trust for any of this.
technology" can bring to our lives
that make us uncomfortable.
too many opportunities and feelings
會有太多的機會和感受
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Poppy Crum - Neuroscientist, technologistPoppy Crum builds technologies that best leverage human physiology to enhance our experiences and how we interact with the world.
Why you should listen
Poppy Crum is dedicated to the development of immersive technologies that leverage human physiology and perceptual realities to enhance our experiences and interactions in the world. She has advanced a mission to democratize the way people of all abilities benefit from sensory technologies -- and how effectively technology communicates back to each of us. She believes the power of intelligent technologies is only realized with dynamic optimization and learning of as much of our personal and contextual data as possible.
Crum is chief scientist at Dolby Laboratories, leading the company's integration of neuroscience and sensory data science into its entertainment, communication and future technologies. She is also adjunct professor at Stanford University, where her work focuses on the impact and feedback potential of gaming and immersive environments, such as augmented and virtual reality, on neuroplasticity and learning. She has been recognized with the Advanced Imaging Society's Distinguished Leadership Award and the Consumer Technology Association's Technology and Standards Achievement Award for work towards the introduction of affordable, over-the-counter hearing-aid devices, and she is a fellow of the Audio Engineering Society. She has also been named to Billboard Magazine's 100 most influential female executives in the music industry. Prior to joining Dolby Laboratories, Crum was Research Faculty in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
Poppy Crum | Speaker | TED.com