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Human Net, Emotion, Mood, Crowdsourcing

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Innovation @ BBG. The magic button — Make Everything OK. TheUglyDance.com - Turn yourself into an ugly dancer. Swisscom Teams Up With Jinni to Bring Semantic Discovery to Live TV & VOD Subscribers. Tuesday, July 10th, 2012 Award-Winning Taste-and-Mood Based Discovery Engine Gives Swisscom Customers a Personalized and Holistic Semantic Discovery Experience TEL AVIV, ISRAEL — Jinni, the innovative, new taste-and-mood based discovery engine for movies and TV shows, announced its partnership with Swisscom (Swiss: SCMN) for integration into On Demand and live TV.

The Swisscom service will offer its customers an intuitive, user-centric guide to seamlessly integrate discovery, content recommendations and viewing. “The shift to on demand TV is fueling innovation in delivery and discovery solutions,” said Jinni Media CEO and Co-founder Yosi Glick. “Swisscom continues to lead at the forefront of this rapidly developing market and Jinni is proud to partner with Swisscom to deliver semantic video discovery solutions across the impressive Swisscom content catalogs.”

Jinni-powered TV guide features: Taste Channels – personalized channels based on different facets of the user’s tastes. A second life for practice? For 30 years, New York psychologist Richard H. Wexler, PhD, has helped companies develop effective leaders and productive teams. But in the last three years, much of his work has taken place not in Manhattan office buildings, but in virtual meeting rooms. There, digital versions of employers and employees, or avatars, come together to work on projects, get training and receive help with professional or personal problems. "Until recently, the technology just wasn't available for the average practitioner to be able to do this sort of thing," says Wexler.

"But it's moving so rapidly that [now] you're limited only by your imagination. " Wexler and his wife, psychologist and executive coach Suzanne Roff-Wexler, PhD, are part of an emerging cadre of psychological practitioners, researchers, trainers and product developers who are bringing avatars and other forms of virtual technology into the practice realm. That's also the case with student training or business applications. Flat-screen apps. Inspire me, i dare you. Effective Ways To Get Out of a Negative Mindset | Nudge-ur-Mind. The Backfire Effect. The Misconception: When your beliefs are challenged with facts, you alter your opinions and incorporate the new information into your thinking. The Truth: When your deepest convictions are challenged by contradictory evidence, your beliefs get stronger.

Wired, The New York Times, Backyard Poultry Magazine – they all do it. Sometimes, they screw up and get the facts wrong. In ink or in electrons, a reputable news source takes the time to say “my bad.” If you are in the news business and want to maintain your reputation for accuracy, you publish corrections. In 2006, Brendan Nyhan and Jason Reifler at The University of Michigan and Georgia State University created fake newspaper articles about polarizing political issues.

They repeated the experiment with other wedge issues like stem cell research and tax reform, and once again, they found corrections tended to increase the strength of the participants’ misconceptions if those corrections contradicted their ideologies. No, probably not. Numbers From Around the Web: Round 5. Today’s NFATW post comes from Martin Sona, a QS friend and organizer for the QS Aachen/Maastricht meetup group, who pointed out this fascinating project on the QS Facebook group. Dale Lane is a software developer for IBM living and working in Hampshire and he has been developing neat personal tools for his self tracking for the last few years. Let’s take a look at a few of them. Tracking TV Watching Inspired by the background data collection offered by last.fm designed to capture music listening habits Dale set out to create his own “scrobbler” to better understand his TV viewing habits. What he came up with is amazing: Using a bit of code running on his media PC he is able to track a number of variables including time of day, what program he’s watching, his most watched channels, and many many more.

Smile! Not satisfied while merely understanding what he was watching on TV, Dale took it upon himself to better understand how we was reacting to what he was watching. Roundup: Mood Tracking Tools. How do you feel today? (Image by toby) Thanks to everyone who participated in last week’s energy tool roundup. This week we’re looking for tools to help track happiness, emotions, and other mood-related things. It’s for the complete catalog we’re putting together of all the self-tracking tools out there.

Please help us to make sure we include your favorite tool, your company, or your project. Self-promotion is allowed! Here are all the mood tracking tools we’ve found so far. What else? The nexters | nexters | big ideas. inspiring society. Tom Latchford Founder - Raising IT We are also supporting a smaller group of talented social entrepreneurs who we aim to assist through the Nexters programme. Click the links to find out more about their projects. Angel Salazar, AIDA Technology AIDA TechnologyTM is developing FusedHealthTM, immersive mobile games linked to geo-location and social media apps that nudge people to adopt healthy lifestyles.

The key ingredients are our apps tracking physical activity, immersive fun games, reward points, and social interaction and kudos (e.g., moving up levels and avatars). Our first mobile app directly contributes to help children and teenagers to become more physically active, have fun, and engage with their communities. Jo Edwardes, Good ConnectionA free-to-use social network that enables users to support a charity of their choice for free just by using the site. Crowdsourcing.

Crowdsourcing

TV Without A Remote: A Teen’s Take On Streaming. Today’s post comes to us from Caroline Marques, a high school senior and Youth Advisory Board Member who explains how her and her friends watch TV. They do so almost entirely online — as is the case with many Millennials, especially once they reach 18 — catching shows at their convenience, but usually by themselves.

It’s hard to remember a time when sitting around a TV set was common, as Caroline explains, weighing in on the pros and cons of broadcast and streaming for Millennials. To contact members of the YAB, you can email them at youthadvisoryboard @ ypulse.com or simply leave a message in the comments. TV Without A Remote: A Teen’s Take On Streaming When was the last time I sat down on a comfy couch to watch my favorite TV show with a bowl of popcorn and a few friends? We can now watch any show on our own schedule — we aren’t glued to a TV guide or to a certain program. Since I live abroad, I have few opportunities to watch current episodes of American TV shows as they air. Samsung patent wants to get in user's face. (Phys.org) -- Samsung phones of the future may tell if you are happy, sad, or altogether disgusted. Samsung has filed for a patent on a method and device that can tell a user’s emotions based on facial expressions.

The patent, “Method and Apparatus for Recognizing an Emotion of an Individual Based on Facial Action Units” was filed at the USPTO back in October last year but came to light this month. Samsung’s approach will be to use “Action Units” (AUs) to recognize how a person feels. The AUs are components of a facial-action coding system. Several AUs combine to form a string that's detected and matched to an emotion label that best fits the string. Fundamentally, the patent is talking about a device that will pick up a person’s emotions by “reading” the person’s face, whether the results indicate the user is angry, disgusted, sad, happy, or something else in the realm of emotions.

Also, over at Cambridge University, Prof.

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Survey and poll software.