Difference between revisions of "UNRVL9-Project1"

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===Questions===
 
===Questions===
==How are we going to detect body language?==
 
:1. Different wearables attached to different body parts (fout, hand, head?) can give us input.
 
 
 
==Thursday 15/10/2020==
 
==Thursday 15/10/2020==
 
===References and sources===
 
===References and sources===

Revision as of 16:21, 16 October 2020

Tuesday 13/10/2020

References

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremiah_Denton
https://learn.adafruit.com/chatty-light-up-cpx-mask
https://learn.adafruit.com/anatomical-3d-printed-beating-heart-with-makecode
https://learn.adafruit.com/sound-activated-shark-mask

Alternative Greetings

We talked about the scale of greetings from intimate to formal and how to represent that. Greetings can be awkward if you don't have the same expectations. A conversation about the greeting habits of your new lovers family can be useful to avoid very awkward semi-hand-shake-kiss-hug-situations.

How will greetings evolve after Corona? Will they fade? Will we greet more extreme because we missed it so much? Hugging as much as possible to compensate the previous touchless times. Or maybe we'll act more aggressively and head bump instead of kiss.


ZOOM GREETINGS
Greeting1.gif
Wiping the camera to show respect. How many times you wipe it, what you wipe it with indicate levels of respect. You can customize your wipe pattern like you can a secret handshake with a friend.

Greeting2.gif
Bowing your camera indicates respect because you can see if someone took the effort to put on pants to meet you.

PERSONAL GREETINGS
(this one is formal)
(this one is informal)
Using the eyes and eyebrows because you can't touch others or see their mouth. Eyebrow raise could indicate a smile or a hello, the amount of times raised indicate the scale from intimate to formal.
Greeting5.gif
The ultimate sign of respect could be to close eyes and raise eyebrows to show you really trust someone, like for a grandparent.

involving the CIRCUIT PLAYGROUND
How can we convert a scale of intimacy while greeting another person by using color, speed, pattern, tonal value of sound?

The digital version of our wipe-your-camera-idea would be wiping the circuit instead of your camera. It would light up in more warm or cold tones to visualize a different level of intimacy. A blue wave would be a formal greeting, a handshake. A red wave would be a tight hug.

Questions

How can we show non-verbal types of conversation without being present?

1. What is beyond the frame? Can we experiment with the viewport of our camera?
You only see one square cut out of someone's environment when you're zooming. A ::glimpse of your surroundings are shown when you are switching places. This is nice.
We can use a servo motor? Processing?
2. What is the energy in the room?
3. How can we get a better sense of spacial location?
4. What is the output?
5. Can we transfer sight into something more abstract?

Wednesday 14/10/2020

References

https://www.pretotyping.org/
https://lauren-mccarthy.com/us

Thoughts

Wednesday we talked about the different types of greeting then we eventually transitioned to talking about body language and how you can't read body language through a video screen.

We had decided to use motion detection under the table to show the movement. That data would relate to emotions, like shaking your foot violently indicates impatience and other things along that line. These movements would be translated into colors varying from warm to cool colors depending on what the movement indicated. We would also use processing to create a shape that would change from soft to sharp depending on the mood the sensor is conveying.


Under.gif
As an experiment we filmed a part of ourselves that is not visible during a Zoom call.

Questions

Thursday 15/10/2020

References and sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synesthesia
http://soundbible.com/tags-water.html

wrap up meeting 16h

Work Marathon

The Drop (3D-model)

Anna Beirinckx & Yingzhou Chen

Coding (Processing and Python)

Mats Cornegoor, Cato Speltincx & Giovanni Zanella

Visualisation

Yingzhou Chen, Soo Seng & Ana Tobin