Making the Invisible Visible with a Wizer (Click to Read)

Michael Smith (on Linkedin) while reading Memories with Maya, pointed out a solution that provides additional hard-science to one of the scenes in the story.


Food for thought: Will Google Glass app developers incorporate the analysis algorithms?


From Chapter 4: Brainstorming the Wizer (visor with augmented intelligence built-in)



Eventually he spoke again: “So, maybe the AI accesses the current frame, references time of day, and using a gestalt subroutine, figures something is not right with a person in a slumped position. The skeletal overlay could do that–”


I interrupted him. “Uh huh. Yeah, I’ll leave the jargon to you. In essence what I mean is if the AI sees a person lying askew on the floor it can figure something’s not right by accessing feedback from the cameras. Facial expressions can easily be isolated from a stereo pair and perhaps pulse irregularity can be gleaned from image brightness, right?”


“Pulse reading from image brightness would depend on the fidelity of the image, but facial expressions, yes,” he said. “And if someone’s collapsed on the floor, chances are there will be a skeletal mismatch with the superimposed human IK rig.”



It’s good to note that there are true Hard Science fans reading the book who are interested in plausible science.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?&v=s...

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Published on May 22, 2013 21:37
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