Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to www.scribd.com

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
151 views58 pages

Wearable Computing: Present and Future

The document discusses the present and future state of wearable computing. It notes that investment in wearable companies has increased significantly in recent years and that the wearable technology industry is projected to be worth $52 billion by 2020. It provides examples of popular early wearable devices like Pebble and Fitbit and discusses factors driving growth in wearables like declining hardware costs, cloud storage, and location data. The document also outlines categories of current wearable devices, types of inputs they utilize, common applications, and algorithms. Additionally, it addresses concerns regarding privacy, security, energy use, and intrusiveness of wearables and presents ideas for new applications and use cases of wearable technology.

Uploaded by

Stefan Bratescu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
151 views58 pages

Wearable Computing: Present and Future

The document discusses the present and future state of wearable computing. It notes that investment in wearable companies has increased significantly in recent years and that the wearable technology industry is projected to be worth $52 billion by 2020. It provides examples of popular early wearable devices like Pebble and Fitbit and discusses factors driving growth in wearables like declining hardware costs, cloud storage, and location data. The document also outlines categories of current wearable devices, types of inputs they utilize, common applications, and algorithms. Additionally, it addresses concerns regarding privacy, security, energy use, and intrusiveness of wearables and presents ideas for new applications and use cases of wearable technology.

Uploaded by

Stefan Bratescu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 58

Wearable Computing : Present

and Future
Business case
• In 2013, investors poured $458 million into 49
wearable company deals ( CB Insights )

• $52 Billion Industry by 2020 ( Credit Suisse )

• Major tech companies like Apple, Google,


Samsung and Intel investing heavily in
wearables, with non-tech giants like Nike,
Under Armour, Adidas, Fossil, Timex etc.
10-Jan-20 slide 2
Popularity Example

• Pebble

• Kickstarter Campaign

• Seeks : $100K
• Raises : $10+ Million

10-Jan-20 slide 3
Factors in Wearable Tech Today

• Faster and Cheaper Hardware


• Cloud Storage
• Location Data
• Quantified Self Activity
• Gaming Industry
• Visual & Voice Technology
• User Experience

10-Jan-20 slide 4
State-of-the-art

• Devices

• Inputs

• Applications

• Algorithms

10-Jan-20 slide 5
Devices
Google Glass (Smart Glasses)

10-Jan-20 slide 7
Jawbone (Activity Monitor)

10-Jan-20 slide 8
Fitbit (Fitness Tracker)

10-Jan-20 slide 9
Pebble (Smart Wrist Watch)

10-Jan-20 slide 10
Muse (Brain Monitor)

10-Jan-20 slide 11
OmSignal (Smart Shirt)

10-Jan-20 slide 12
FootLogger (Shoe Sole for Fitness
Tracking)

10-Jan-20 slide 13
Mimo (Baby Status Monitoring)

10-Jan-20 slide 14
MC10 (Flexible wearable sensors for
health monitoring)

10-Jan-20 slide 15
Myo (Muscle Activity Tracker)

10-Jan-20 slide 16
Oura (Smart Ring)

10-Jan-20 slide 17
Scanadu (Health – heart rate –
ECG – Blood Pressure etc.
Checker)

10-Jan-20 slide 18
New Wearables – New
Applications

• Wearable Device for Visualizing Knee


Rehabilitation Exercises (CHI 2013)

10-Jan-20 slide 19
And Many More ……
Classification of Wearable
Devices (Function Wise)
• Life Logger
• Gesture Recognizers
• Entertainer
– Video
– Gaming
• Assistant
– For Chore Jobs
– For Creative Jobs
– For Emergency Jobs
10-Jan-20 slide 21
Classification of Wearable
Devices (Creation Wise)

• Replacing Daily Wearables with Smarter


Alternatives
– Watches, Shirts, Shoes, Socks etc.

• Creating New Wearables


– Armband, Headband, Shirt Clippers etc.

10-Jan-20 slide 22
Inputs
Ambient Sensors

• Accelerometer, Gyroscope, Magnetometer,


Barometer, Thermometer, Relative Humidity
Sensor, Light Sensor etc.

Accelerometer Gyroscope

10-Jan-20 slide 24
Physical Activity Sensor

• MC10 Sensor, EEG sensor etc.

Interaxon Muse EEG MC10 Sensor


reader

10-Jan-20 slide 25
Traditional Inputs/Capture

• Audio(microphone), Video, Photos (camera –


head mounted/ body-attached/ smartphone)
...
• Wi-Fi, Cellular, GPS …

10-Jan-20 slide 26
Applications
Life Logging (Augmented
Memory)

• Google Glass
• Narrative Clip Syncing with cloud
• Getting summary from the video or audio or
images – an important problem !!
• Automatic diary creation for the users or
taking notes for the forgetful users is
important.

10-Jan-20 slide 28
Activity Tracking/Monitoring
• Calorie Used (Wireless Health ‘13 paper used
to guess correctly with accelerometer)
• Sleep Pattern
• Steps walked
• Detecting Eye Contact using Wearable Eye-
Tracking Glasses
• Wearable Activity Recognition for Dogs!!

10-Jan-20 slide 29
Healthcare

• Monitors different vitals of users and help


them to take informed decisions.
• Emergency Patient observation and
immediate healthcare notification.

10-Jan-20 slide 30
Gesture Recognizing
• Free from Gesture used for authentication
(MobiSys 2014 – MPI,Rutgers)
• Identifying Emotions Expressed by Mobile
Users through 2D Surface and 3D Motion
Gestures (UbiComp 2012)
• Unobtrusively Wearable Sensor Suite for
Inferring the Onset, Causality, and
Consequences of Stress in the Field (Sensys
2013)
10-Jan-20 slide 31
Assistant
• Anywhere, Anytime Information and
Communication
• Sensor-Assisted Facial Recognition: An
Enhanced Bio-metric Authentication System
for Smartphones (MobiSys 2014) [Trick :
Relative Position estimation using sensors]
• Navigation using multimodal sensors
(NaviComf, PerCom 2012)
• A Smartphone-Based Obstacle Detection and Classification
System for Assisting Visually Impaired People (CVF, ICCV 2013)
10-Jan-20 slide 32
Assistant to the special people
• Geometric Layout Analysis in a Wearable Reading Device for
the Blind and Visually Impaired (MobiCase 13)
• Parent-Driven Wearable Cameras for Autism Support,
CMU, UbiComp poster

10-Jan-20 slide 33
Augmented Reality

• Google Glass like view which adds layer of


virtual view to normal view.
• After integrating gesture recognition and voice
commands, augmented reality can impact
retail industry, social networks, and gaming
industry.

10-Jan-20 slide 34
Algorithms
General Flow

• Feature Selection and Extraction (PCA etc.)


• Noise removal and Smoothing (Local
Averaging, DTW etc.)
• Peak Detection and Filtering (Butterfly
Filtering etc.)
• Unsupervised (K-Means, EM Maximization
etc.) and Supervised (SVM, LDA etc.)

10-Jan-20 slide 36
Needs Better Sampling Algorithms

• How much to sample ? When ? What is the


accuracy needed ?
• Should it be application based or activity
based ?

10-Jan-20 slide 37
Interesting Marriages
Wearable Computing and
Smartphone
• Most Common and Obvious
• Hub, Connector, and Storage
• Bluetooth, Wi-Fi Direct, NFC ( Audio NFC (Dhawni,
SIGCOMM ‘13) & Visible Light (Hotnets 2013) !! )

10-Jan-20 slide 39
Wearable Computing and
Smart Home/ IoT

10-Jan-20 slide 40
Wearable Computing and
Gaming

• Facebook buys Oculus Rift to give user a


virtual social gaming experience …
• Microsoft buys Osterhout Design Group in San
Francisco, which creates virtual gaming
environments.
• Wearable computing can make a daily skype
or phone call a direct virtual interaction
experience !!

10-Jan-20 slide 41
Wearable Computing and
Search

• Google Acquires Nest


• Physical Graph - Web Graph – Knowledge
Graph
• Better and personalized results
• Closer to the actual Information Need

10-Jan-20 slide 42
Multiple Wearables in sync
MIThrill (MIT Media Lab)

10-Jan-20 slide 44
Sixth Sense ( An Old One ?)

10-Jan-20 slide 45
Oculus Rift and Myo

10-Jan-20 slide 46
Concerns
Privacy

• Expectation and Purpose: Understanding


Users’ Mental Models of Mobile App Privacy
through Crowdsourcing (Privacy depends on
Context, UbiComp 2012)
• Give whole level characteristics to the service
provider not each user level specific
information.

10-Jan-20 slide 48
Security

• Wearable Device can be hacked and attacked


wirelessly. Patients may die.
• Spoofing and altering are dangerous
phenomena which can actually derail the
whole purpose. May create panic.
• Side channel attack through power trace
analysis is possible.

10-Jan-20 slide 49
Energy
• Less is More: Energy-Efficient Mobile Sensing
with SenseLess (MobiHeld 2012)
• Power Constrained Sensor Sample Selection
for Improved Form Factor and Lifetime in
Localized BANs (Wireless Health 2012)
• Power will come from human body energy !!
(Thad Starner, IBM Systems Journal)
• Energy-Efficient Continuous Activity Recognition on
Mobile Phones ( Your Activity will define Model
(Energy <->Classification), ISWC 2012)
10-Jan-20 slide 50
Intrusion

• Too much personalization or assistance will


repel users
• Users will be overwhelmed by the huge
amount of data and can easily be panicked by
misinterpreting any vital health data
• May curb creativity and reduce recall rate

10-Jan-20 slide 51
New Ideas
Automatic Text Tagging with
Emotions (Google Glass +
Muse + Jawbone)

• Each story can be automatically tagged with


emotions by tracking the eye movement,
sounds, activity etc.
• User can easily search according to his mood
or can be automatically given reading
suggestions of a particular position of a book
depending upon his mood !!

10-Jan-20 slide 53
AutoRemember : A Google for Daily
Things (Tile + Google Glass +
Smartphone)
• We forget. We can’t find important docs
when we need
• Can we use our mobile, our sensors, google
glass, rfids, tiles or qr codes to automatically
keeping track of our things?
• This system will also automatically categorize
the things for us; sometimes also
opportunistically scan some docs to store
these in cloud for ubiquitous access.
10-Jan-20 slide 54
MindDoctor : Body Language Detection -
Mood Inference - Mental health Suggestion
• By intelligently and energy efficiently sensing our
activities and context, a system can easily infer
our mood and can set the color & background
music of my smart home accordingly.
• The system can suggest some exercises like deep
breathing when we are really tensed.
• The system can also detect our body language or
postures, and make suggestions according to
context – like be confident when in meeting.
10-Jan-20 slide 55
What is Next …
Edible Computers

• "I expect to see edible computers pills, which


will act like little medical monitors,
downloading information about your state of
health to a computer you wear.“
– Nicholas Negroponte, MIT Media Lab, 1999

• Motorola Password Pills & Tatoos ..

10-Jan-20 slide 57
Planting Computers
(Transhumanism?)

10-Jan-20 slide 58

You might also like