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Your Phone as a Personal Coach

A new cell-phone add-on collects your personal data to help correct your behavior.
Thursday, August 30, 2007
By Kate Greene

Researchers at Accenture Technology Labs, in Palo Alto, CA, have developed a device to help let people know when they need to change their behavior. The gadget, called the Personal Performance Coach, collects data about a person's actions through various sensors, including GPS, a microphone, and a heart monitor. This information is transmitted from a wireless headset (which will eventually be condensed into an ear bud) to the phone; the data is then offloaded to a server, where it is analyzed. The phone receives the report and displays the results in a pie chart, for example.

There are a number of research groups that are working on using sensors and mobile devices to collect more-accurate information about people's behaviors. (See "Making Phones Polite" and "Gadgets That Know Your Next Move.") Researchers at Intel are making sensing devices for elder-care applications in order to monitor elderly people who live alone.

Accenture is betting that one of the first applications of such sensing platforms will be in the corporate space, to help businesspeople be more effective when, for instance, making a sale or conducting a meeting.

From the press release:

The first application developed for the Personal Performance Coach prototype focuses on making individuals more effective in professional conversations, including sales calls, team meetings and negotiation sessions.

"The system matches observed behavior against performance goals in virtual real time and then makes suggestions about how to better achieve behaviors," said [Alex Kass, a researcher at Accenture Technology Labs and the project leader]. "The neat thing is that, unlike in a training session, this monitors exactly what is happening in the field. If you set the goal, for example, to listen to your client for the first 20 minutes and not talk very much until you have the chance to hear what he has to say, and suddenly you're interrupting him and talking 80 percent of the time, it will tell you."

The verbose salesman can even determine his preferred method of feedback. He can have a voice--or a series of beeps--whisper in his ear that he's talking too much, he can glance down and look at a device that will reveal a pie chart on who's dominating the conversation, or he can choose to view it later on a desktop while going over the day's sales notes.

There's no mention of privacy measures in the release, and I'm sure that some people would balk at the idea of having a gadget collect all sorts of personal data and send it to a remote server. But perhaps some businesspeople don't think the information is too sensitive, and they wouldn't mind being monitored if it means improved job performance. Do you think this is a useful application of sensor technology?


Comments

  • Stop Smoking?
    Rackett on 08/31/2007 at 12:13 AM
    Posts:
    1
    How about a phone that helps people stop smoking? Or modify other negative behavior?
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • mri
    jeatomtom on 08/05/2008 at 4:31 PM
    Posts:
    2
    1.5 tesla mri's in jxn., ms. showed only one cervical lesion. dxed. as transverse myelitis? i went to mayo clinic, rockchester,mn. i talked them into a stronger image , which they called tweeting a 1.5 tesla mri ,giving a better picture. it showed 7 cervical lesions. i got well on valtrex for ebv , but later, after cortisone for poison ivy ,hhv6 was found and famvir helped this. tell me about tweeting an mri,please. a2nd mri there showed the same 7 lesions, smaller. mri in jxn. did not show any lesions. can we tweet an mri in jxn. ms. with a computor or how would you do it?. dx. is ms.
    Rate this comment: 12345
    • Re: mri
      jeatomtom on 08/05/2008 at 4:50 PM
      Posts:
      2
      how cqn we see smaller images -easier to see? tweet an mri? mayo said this helped to dx. ms over transverse myelitis. ohly one lesion seen at univ. hospital in jxn. ms. with gadalinium, where mayo saw 7 small lesions in cervicaol region with tweeting the 1.5 tesla mri.  follow-up mri did the same and the 7 lesions were smaller 4 years later, with dx. of 2ndary progressive ms. can a 1.5 tesla mri be easier to see by tweeting with a computor or otherwise?
      Rate this comment: 12345

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