hapticity

  • BLOG
  • Projects
  • Patents
  • Publications
  • Music
  • About
10 August 2011

Audio analysis of baby cries can differentiate “normal” fussiness from pain


The team has employed sound pattern recognition approach that uses a statistical analysis of the frequency of cries and the power function of the audio spectrum to classify different types of crying. They were then able to correlate the different recorded audio spectra with a baby’s emotional state as confirmed by the child’s parents. In their tests recordings of crying babies with a painful genetic disorder, were used to make differentiating between the babies’ pained cries and other types of crying more obvious. They achieved 100% success rate in a validation to classify pained cries and “normal” cries.

I’m a new parent of twin boys, and I could really use something like this. But it would be even better if the algorithm could break down the “normal” cries into specific needs. Mr. Nagashima, you are doing God’s work; faster, please.

Category: language | Tag: babies, twins | Add Comment

No comments

Add a comment

Your Comment

Change mind? Click here to cancel.

  • Categories

    • art (19)
    • blog (6)
    • books (8)
    • code (5)
    • cognition (12)
    • gesture (3)
    • history (1)
    • interfaces (28)
    • language (19)
    • medical (7)
    • modality (1)
    • music (32)
    • neuroscience (13)
    • outreach (10)
    • perception (14)
    • photography (13)
    • physiology (10)
    • resources (3)
    • robotics (18)
    • sociology (5)
    • software (3)
    • space (4)
    • tactility (16)
    • transhumanism (8)
    • unclassifiable (2)
    • visualization (1)
  • Tags

    accessibility actuators affordances Alva Noƫ apocalypse augmented reality babies brain-computer interfaces CCRMA communication completely awesome embodiment emotion films force feedback gaming High-Fidelity Haptics Immersion Corporation James Gibson lameness live music Mars Merleau-Ponty metaphor mixes mobility musical instruments NYT phenomenology philosophy prosthetics Rulers San Francisco scare quotes sensors sensory augmentation skill strange synesthesia vibration vibrotactile feedback vibrotaction Wall Street Journal Wittgenstein words
  • Links

    • Alexander Refsum Jensenius
    • Aram Harijan
    • CIRMMT
    • IDMIL
    • Immersion Corporation
    • Joseph Malloch
    • Liz Beck
    • Liz Beck Designs
    • McGill Digital Orchestra
    • Next Nature
    • Nik Ramage
    • SensorWiki
    • Stephen Vincent
    • Touch Usability
    • Xenia Pestova
  • Elsewhere

    •  
    •  
    •  
    •  
© hapticity. Powered by WordPress. Theme based on Pyrmont V2.