Scientists Developing 'Nurturing' Computers From: myDNA.com - 05/12/2005 University of Houston computer science professor Ioannis Pavlidis, with the help of his Infrared Imaging Group at the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, has developed the Automatic THErmal Monitoring System (ATHEMOS) that can physiologically monitor human users without touch. ATHEMOS is part of Pavlidis' effort to revolutionize human-computer interaction by making computers aware of their users' emotional and physical states in order to facilitate more appropriate responses. The ultimate goal of Pavlidis' "Interacting with Human Physiology" research is to tap computing resources at home and in the office and integrate them with new sensing, algorithmic, and interface techniques to augment user experience while simultaneously constructing a new model for preventive medicine. The initiative calls for a computer equipped with a thermal imaging camera that functions as a peripheral, modeling facial imagery by bioheat to extract vital signs and make deductions about numerous health symptoms continuously. The National Science Foundation's Division of Information and Intelligence Systems recently awarded a three-year, $640,169 research grant to Pavlidis' project. The project's human experimentation angle will involve the professor's collaboration with Columbia University's Medical Usability Lab and the Physiology Lab of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN. Read the entire article at: http://www.mydna.com/resources/news/200505/news_20050512_nurtur.html Links: Ioannis Pavlidis http://www.vcl.uh.edu/~pavlidis/index.html Computer scientists at UH developing 'nurturing' computers http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-09/uoh-csa090704.php