Difference between pages "Augmented facilitation" and "New York University Tisch"

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Facilitators use their senses and intuition to monitor and evaluate what's happening in the room. But even highly skilled facilitators can only garner so much from what they see and feel. This is why it's critical to incorporate augmented feedback mechanisms both during and after meetings. These can be as simple as asking the group how they're feeling to using colored cards as a mechanism for giving real-time feedback. But these solutions also have limitations.
{{Venue
|Address=721 Broadway, New York, NY 10003
|URL=http://tisch.nyu.edu/about/contact-us
}}
They expect meetings to be nonprofit/tech focused, and like tech + art projects.


What if we could use sensors and technology to make feedback more explicit in real-time for everyone, not just facilitators?
Referred by Lane Rasberry.
 
Simple possibilities:
 
* Variation on Alexander Kjerulf's tennis ball metric for measuring group happiness
 
More technical possibilities:
 
* "Listen" for [[heart synchronization]]
* Monitor emotions over time via facial recognition
 
[[Category:Project]]

Latest revision as of 23:52, 14 September 2021

New York University Tisch
Address address::721 Broadway, New York, NY 10003
URL url::http://tisch.nyu.edu/about/contact-us
Phone phone::
Email email::
Contact name contact name::

They expect meetings to be nonprofit/tech focused, and like tech + art projects.

Referred by Lane Rasberry.