StartleCam is a wearable video camera, computer, and sensing system, which enables the camera to be controlled via both conscious and preconscious events involving the wearer. Traditionally, a wearer consciously hits record on the video camera, or runs a computer script to trigger the camera according to some pre-specified frequency. The system described here offers an additional option: images are saved by the system when it detects certain events of supposed interest to the wearer. The implementation described here aims to capture events that are likely to get the user's attention and to be remembered. Attention and memory are highly correlated with what psychologists call arousal level, and the latter is often signaled by skin conductivity changes; consequently, StartleCam monitors the wearer's skin conductivity. StartleCam looks for patterns indicative of a "startle response" in the skin conductivity signal. When this response is detected, a buffer of digital images, recently captured by the wearer's digital camera, is downloaded and optionally transmitted wirelessly to a webserver. This selective storage of digital images creates a "flashbulb" memory archive for the wearable which aims to mimic the wearer. Using a startle detection filter, the StartleCam system has been demonstrated to work on several wearers in both indoor and outdoor ambulatory environments.
[1]
A. Damasio.
Descartes' error: emotion, reason, and the human brain. avon books
,
1994
.
[2]
Pattie Maes,et al.
Agents that reduce work and information overload
,
1994,
CACM.
[3]
R. Levenson.
Autonomic Nervous System Differences among Emotions
,
1992
.
[4]
Magda B. Arnold,et al.
Memory and the brain
,
1984
.
[5]
Joseph E LeDoux.
Emotion, memory and the brain.
,
1994,
Scientific American.
[6]
Steve Mann,et al.
Wearable Computing: A First Step Toward Personal Imaging
,
1997,
Computer.
[7]
D. P. Lloyd,et al.
Response of Cholinergically Innervated Sweat Glands to Adrenaline and Noradrenaline
,
1959,
Nature.
[8]
J. Cacioppo,et al.
Principles of psychophysiology : physical, social, and inferential elements
,
1990
.
[9]
Jennifer Healey,et al.
Affective wearables
,
1997,
Digest of Papers. First International Symposium on Wearable Computers.
[10]
George P. Chrousos,et al.
Mechanisms of Physical and Emotional Stress
,
1988,
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology.
[11]
Sean A. Spence,et al.
Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain
,
1995
.
[12]
M. Helander.
Applicability of drivers' electrodermal response to the design of the traffic environment.
,
1978,
The Journal of applied psychology.