Skip to main content

Home/ HGSET561/ Group items tagged MIT Media Lab

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Tomoko Matsukawa

MIT Media Lab: Learning Through Connecting - 2 views

  •  
    A blog from MIT after their Scratch@MIT conference this year (only happens once every two years). It suggests that the use of Scratch encourages 4 different types of connections that the user can benefit from during his/her learning of creativity.
Rupangi Sharma

The SPINNER project from the Responsive Environments Group at MIT Media Lab - 0 views

  •  
    The SPINNER project from the Responsive Environments Group at MIT Media Lab is the first research platform designed to investigate the world of ubiquitous video devices. The Spinner can automatically edit video to fit a narrative structure. It uses video from cameras installed at the Media Lab and sensor data from people generated by wearable smart badges to track their activity and location. The system then creates a video using the characteristics detected from the sensor data with the video captured by the cameras.
Hannah Lesk

"Technology in the Classroom: What's Next?" Town Hall Forum at MIT Media Lab - 0 views

  •  
    There was a great forum on the future of technology in the classroom at the MIT Media Lab today. For those who couldn't make it, the video should be posted on this site soon and will also air on NBC on Sunday, September 23. I found it to be a nice blend of policy and practice-focused discussion, and despite weak moderation, I think it's worth the time to watch!
Adrian Melia

LuminAR | Fluid Interfaces - 0 views

  •  
    LuminAR is another project out of the Fluid Interfaces Group at the MIT Media Lab that combines a camera, projector, and computer into the currently available infrastructure of lamps and sockets to augment reality with additional information.
Richard Liuzzi

Family Creative Learning - 3 views

  •  
    I'll be working on this project through the Lifelong Kindergarten research group at MIT Media Lab this semester
  •  
    This is very cool...I haven't seen much on cross-generational learning, but I think that there are very valid benefits to it (as well as multi-generational living). Anyways, it seems not so different from the research that Uche is doing in the class. Look forward to hearing how your semester goes!
Hongge Ren

Pranav Mistry: The thrilling potential of SixthSense technology - 3 views

  •  
    http://www.ted.com At TEDIndia, Pranav Mistry demos several tools that help the physical world interact with the world of data -- including a deep look at his SixthSense device and a new, paradigm-shifting paper "laptop." In an onstage Q&A, Mistry says he'll open-source the software behind SixthSense, to open its possibilities to all.
  •  
    Hi there Hongge, thanks for sharing this amazing video. He's managed to bridge certain key technologies and made them more intuitive for the daily user. It's great that he's made it open-source too! Maybe we could pay a visit to MIT to check it out? I wonder though, whether such a device would in the future not only project thoughts and programs but also capture user data and begin to 'suggest' or advertise certain things to you. Scary but the potential is enormous. Again, thanks!
  •  
    Thanks, Matthew. That video was actually filmed three years ago (yes, even before iPhone 4) and I wonder if Pranav is still at MIT Media Lab. Maybe Karen knows more about him and could make an introduction for us? Machine learning and personalizing content for us is already happening. Personally, I like the idea of personalized content simply because nowadays we can be so easily info-overloaded. It is quite normal for CEOs and political leaders to digest pre-screened/selected info by their secretaries and/or advisers, right? And Google has been doing this for advertising to consumers. I don't mind the right ads appear at the right time when I need the product or service. What really strikes me about Pranav's idea is that it reminds me about the movie Inception, where you can transplant an idea into someone's mind and the distinction between reality and the virtual world is so blurry.
Angela Nelson

Future Affective Technology for Autism and Emotion - 1 views

  •  
    In follow-up to previously posted video, this full article details MIT's Media Lab research on monitoring electrodermal activity (EDA), a measure of sympathetic arousal, and on advancing autism communication through 4 active research areas.
  •  
    This article further details the research behind the video I previously posted relating to emerging technology related to autism emotion and communication.
Cole Shaw

Pearson's take on MOOCs - 2 views

  •  
    Kind of like Professor Dede's post about McGraw-Hill's interest in e-learning, here is a blog post from Pearson about MOOCs. I think his take (Jeff Borden, one of their VPs) is pretty accurate, in that we need a version 2 where it's not as lecture-based as version 1. I would guess that they are working on their own "version 2" solution (perhaps with Knewton?).
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    In a couple of weeks a bunch of Pearson people are spending a couple of days at MIT Media Lab learning about the future of learning. Specifically they are interested on how to capitalise on technology and how to make education of all kinds for all ages more widely accessible, more affordable, more effective. Should be interesting, the lab will be doing demos all day of all the projects in the Media Lab.
  •  
    Maria, do you know if this event is open to the public, or more a "sponsor-day" event? I would love to go!
  •  
    Not sure if it's public event, I only know about it because I will be helping with the App Inventor demo. I'll let you know once I know more info.
Adrian Melia

Crowdsourcing in a crisis: mapping radiation levels in Japan - Knight Foundation - 0 views

  •  
    Per our discussion in class about crowdsourcing, here is an article about the work of MIT Media Lab Director Joi Ito using crowdsourcing to create maps of radiation after the disaster in Fukushima in Japan
Tomoko Matsukawa

YouTube - 2 views

  •  
    Mooc class on "learning creative learning" by mit media lab. Mimi talks briefly about motivation at ariund 36min,
Tomoko Matsukawa

Scratch: Programming for All (MIT Media Lab - Lifelong Kindergarten) - 0 views

  •  
    I see similarity in what CEEO is trying to achieve with MIT's Scratch project. Emphasis on creativity, learning from others, reflecting on process. Figuring how to assess its performance remain as an issue here as well. 
Danna Ortiz

Will Technology Disrupt the Way We Learn? | Aspen Ideas Festival - 1 views

  •  
    The Aspen Ideas Festival has a host of videos, audio clips and transcripts from the 2012 and 2011 sessions on education and edtech. Topics range from "Will Technology Disrupt the Way We Learn" and Knowledge Exchange: Information's Beautiful Future" to "The MiT Media Lab...Seeding Innovation," "The Next Internet" and "Will Technology Truly Transform Education" a panel with Fiona O'Carroll is executive vice president of the New Ventures/Innovation Group at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and Ted Mitchell,President/CEO of the NewSchools Venture Fund." There's much more...
  •  
    Very interesting resource thank you for sharing!
Bridget Binstock

Don't Go Back to School - A Handbook - 6 views

  •  
    This was posted by a classmate at the MIT Media Lab and I wanted to get other educator's feedback on this premise. Almost laughable...
  •  
    As with nature, learners who are skilled, motivated, and talented will find a way. Unfortunately, it's the rare employer who will hire someone just because she is smart and knows a lot. The degree is the necessary but insufficient condition if you're after a job. If you're not, you've probably already figured out the strategies in this book. I am totally using this site to fund the writing of my next novel.
  •  
    I think Kiki has a naive and idealistic view of how one "educates oneself" -- yes, it's possible to figure out the "tricks" but that is no replacement for the engagement and learning that occurs in a learning community.
Marium Afzal

Siftables - a step towards 'smart objects'? - 1 views

  •  
    This is a TED talk about a really interesting project at the MIT Media Lab - blocks that can interact with each other and respond accordingly.
1 - 14 of 14
Showing 20 items per page