| Healey, J. and R. Picard. (1998). StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera. Proc.. of the Second Int. Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC'98). |
....to record conversations and take lowresolution photos. At the university of Tokyo [20] researchers investigate the possibilities to record subjective experience by recording audio, video, as well as heartbeat or skin conductance so as to recall one s experience from various aspects. StartleCam [6] is a wearable device which tries to mimic the wearer s selective memory. The WearCam idea of Mann [13] is also related to the idea of constantly recording one s visual environment. 3. Annotating a Meeting Recording The ultimate goal of our system is to facilitate efficient indexing and ....
J. Healey and R. Picard. Startlecam: A cybernetic wearable camera. In ISWC, pages 42--49, 1998.
.... laptops, wearable computers can be bought off the shelf from xybernaut [3] Charmed [4] or ViA [5] Some earlier attempts at wearable computing for the integration of different video, audio and sensor sources are described in [2] and embodied in research demonstrations such as the StartleCam [29], which attempted to record video if the wearer showed increased excitement according to a biometric sensor attached to the skin. Various research projects have explored the direction of integrating information into daily life through augmented reality, such as the WorkBench [6] SmartRooms [9] ....
J. Healey and R. Picard, "StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera," ISWC '98, October, 1998.
....explored in a range of wearable computing applications. For instance, the Oregon wearable was equipped with sensors for object presence in a collaborative field engineering application [1] and in the Startlecam application biosensors were employed to the end of recognizing extreme user situations [7]. However, these are applications with task focus, and sensor integration is not generalized for wider applicability. In wearable computing, two projects come close in spirit to our work. Paradiso has investigated sensor integration in footwear with a range of applications [8] While the project ....
Healey, J. and Picard, R. StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Wearable Computing, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 19-20 October 1998, pp. 42-49.
....modes of operation for the KidsCam: 1) on demand operation controlled by the children and 2) autonomous mode where the camera notices interesting events occurring and triggers the recording of cameras that share the same view. Wearable cameras have been proposed by Starner et al. [1] Healy et al. [2] and Mann [3] In [2] Healy describes a camera called the Startle Cam, which is triggered upon the detection of the startle response indicated by the wearer s skin conductivity. Techniques suggested in [2] and [6] for gathering information about the physiological states of the wearer using ....
....the KidsCam: 1) on demand operation controlled by the children and 2) autonomous mode where the camera notices interesting events occurring and triggers the recording of cameras that share the same view. Wearable cameras have been proposed by Starner et al. [1] Healy et al. [2] and Mann [3] In [2] Healy describes a camera called the Startle Cam, which is triggered upon the detection of the startle response indicated by the wearer s skin conductivity. Techniques suggested in [2] and [6] for gathering information about the physiological states of the wearer using physiological signals, may ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
Healy, J. and Picard, R.W. StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera. In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Wearable Computers, (1998).
....context awareness. Awareness of both the user and the physical environment is considered a distinguishing feature of wearable computers, and a wide range of applications have been prototyped. For instance, biosensors have been used in wearables to for awareness of the user s attention level [6], and the user s emotional state ; simple audio sensing has been employed to obtain an awareness of whether the user is interruptible [13] and environment sensors have been used to support fieldworkers in mobile workplaces, for awareness of co located objects and their state [7] A few key ....
Healey, J. and Picard, R.W. StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera. Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on Wearable Computing, Pittsburgh, PA, October 19-20, (1998).
No context found.
Healey, J. and R. Picard. (1998). StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera. Proc.. of the Second Int. Symposium on Wearable Computers (ISWC'98).
No context found.
Healey, J. and Picard, R. W.,"StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera", In Proc. ICWC `98, 1998
No context found.
Healey, J. and Picard, R. W.,"StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera", In Proc. ICWC `98, 1998
No context found.
J. Healey and R. Picard. Startlecam: A cybernetic wearable camera. In ISWC, pages 42--49, 1998.
No context found.
J. Healey and R.W. Picard, "StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera", In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Wearable Computers, pages 4249, 1998.
No context found.
J. Healey and RW. Picard. Startlecam: A cybernetic wearable camera. In ISWC, pages 42--49, 1998.
No context found.
J. Healey and R. W. Picard, "StartleCam: A Cybernetic Wearable Camera", in proceedings of IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computers, 1998.
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC