Saturday, March 25, 2023
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • Advertise
Digital Finance Security
  • Home
  • Security Alerts
    • Money Laundering with crypto
    • Minting and Supply
    • Crypto scams
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Programming
  • Regulation and CBDCs
  • Latest
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Security Alerts
    • Money Laundering with crypto
    • Minting and Supply
    • Crypto scams
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Programming
  • Regulation and CBDCs
  • Latest
No Result
View All Result
Digital Finance Security
Home Artificial Intelligence

Smash or pass? This computer can tell

Greg Miller by Greg Miller
February 13, 2023
in Artificial Intelligence, Latest
A A
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedinEmailWhatsappTelegram

Engineers at the University of Cincinnati say the technology might not be far off. They trained a computer — using data from wearable technology that measures respiration, heart rates and perspiration — to identify the type of conversation two people were having based on their physiological responses alone.

Researchers studied a phenomenon in which people’s heart rates, respiration and other autonomic nervous system responses become synchronized when they talk or collaborate. Known as physiological synchrony, this effect is stronger when two people engage deeply in a conversation or cooperate closely on a task.

“Physiological synchrony shows up even when people are talking over Zoom,” said study co-author Vesna Novak, an associate professor of electrical engineering in UC’s College of Engineering and Applied Science.

In experiments with human participants, the computer was able to differentiate four different conversation scenarios with as much as 75% accuracy. The study is one of the first of its kind to train artificial intelligence how to recognize aspects of a conversation based on the participants’ physiology alone.

The study was published in the journal IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing.

Lead author and UC doctoral student Iman Chatterjee said a computer could give you honest feedback about your date — or yourself.

“The computer could tell if you’re a bore,” Chatterjee said. “A modified version of our system could measure the level of interest a person is taking in the conversation, how compatible the two of you are and how engaged the other person is in the conversation.”

Chatterjee said physiological synchrony is likely an evolutionary adaptation. Humans evolved to share and collaborate with each other, which manifests even at a subconscious level, he said.

“It is certainly no coincidence,” he said. “We only notice physiological synchrony when we measure it, but it probably creates a better level of coordination.”

Studies have shown that physiological synchrony can predict how well two people will work together to accomplish a task. The degree of synchrony also correlates with how much empathy a patient perceives in a therapist or the level of engagement students feel with their teachers.

“You could probably use our system to determine which people in an organization work better together in a group and which are naturally antagonistic,” Chatterjee said.

This aspect of affective computing holds huge potential for providing real-time feedback for educators, therapists or even autistic people, Novak said.

“There are a lot of potential applications in this space. We’ve seen it pitched to look for implicit bias. You might not even be aware of these biases,” Novak said.

Previous Post

Bankrupt Genesis introduces a new plan to repay creditors

Next Post

Court issues subpoenas to FTX insiders, including SBF seeking documents

Related Posts

#image_title
Latest

Digital Russian Ruble imminent

March 20, 2023
#image_title
Artificial Intelligence

How AI could upend the world even more than electricity or the internet

March 20, 2023
#image_title
Artificial Intelligence

A new method to boost the speed of online databases

March 14, 2023
#image_title
Artificial Intelligence

A new and better way to create word lists

March 14, 2023
Load More
Next Post
#image_title

Court issues subpoenas to FTX insiders, including SBF seeking documents

#image_title

El Salvador to establish a "Bitcoin Embassy" in Texas

POPULAR

  • #image_title

    Laundering on Ethereum mainnet

    6 shares
    Share 2 Tweet 2
  • Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

    2 shares
    Share 1 Tweet 1
  • Speculation mounts that U.S. banking crisis was a ploy to push CBDCs

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 1,000,000,000 USDT minted on Tron network

    3 shares
    Share 1 Tweet 1
  • USDT Minting Activity

    9 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 2

digitalfinsec.com




201 N. Union St,

Suite 110,

Alexandria, VA 22314, USA





info

  • Advertise
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

partners

Trade stocks today

Trade crypto 20% off today

Trade fractional shares today

Get your hardware wallet today

Analyze stocks like a pro

Recent Alerts

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Laundering on Ethereum mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

Flashloan Attack Alert – ETH mainnet

© 2023 DigitalFinSec.com by Digital Finance Security, LLC - All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Security Alerts
    • Money Laundering with crypto
    • Minting and Supply
    • Crypto scams
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Programming
  • Regulation and CBDCs
  • Latest

--

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy Policy here and our Cookie Policy here.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?