Sayonara Japan, Sayonara Keio. It has been so wonderful! Thank you to my wonderful students, colleagues, and friends. See you in London!!!
Adrian David Cheok joins City University London as Professor of Pervasive Computing
I am very happy to announce that I will be joining City University London as Professor of Pervasive Computing, in the School of Informatics.
I was very excited with the great vision and passion to be a world leading research university, and a world leader in quantum step research and innovation.
It was a great honor to be able to join City University London in their quest to be a world leader by 2016, and I was impressed with the resources and funding they are putting into this goal.
I am very excited to be part of a movement, part of a radical positive change. I am looking very much looking forward to a new adventure in London.
The City Vision 2016
A leading global University committed to academic excellence, focused on business and the professions and located in the heart of London. We are proud of the quality of our education, research and enterprise and are ranked within the top 2% of universities in the world [Times Higher Education World University Rankings].
Interview of Adrian David Cheok on Swedish National Radio Friday 12 July, about communication by touch via the internet. Den första som kramade en höna via internet – Tekniksafari | Sveriges Radio
Interview of Adrian David Cheok on Swedish National Radio Friday 12 July, about communication by touch via the internet.
Mp3 File of the interview can be downloaded here: http://sverigesradio.se/topsy/ljudfil/4600924.mp3
Speech at Leonardo Art/Science Evening Rendezvous
Speech on Mixed Reality by Adrian David Cheok at
Leonardo Art/Science Evening Rendezvous of July 8, 2013
Exploring the Frontiers of Knowledge and Imagination, Fostering Interdisciplinary Networking
San Francisco, July 8, 2013
University of San Francisco
Fromm Hall – FR 115 – Berman Room
Chaired by Piero Scaruffi and Tami Spector
The LASERs are a national program of evening gatherings that bring artists and scientists together for informal presentations and conversation with an audience.
Creative Innovation – Panel session at GIL 2013
Creative Innovation – Panel session at GIL 2013: JAPAN THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY OF GROWTH, INNOVATION AND LEADERSHIP, 26 June 2013 | Tokyo American Club, Tokyo, Japan.
Adrian David Cheok, Jimmy Kim, Co-Founder, Innotive, William H. Saito, Founder & CEO, InTecur, K.K.
Adrian David Cheok Speaker at Apple Store Ginza
The next step in augmented reality: Electrify your taste buds
The next step in augmented reality: Electrify your taste buds
News Article in Sd Japan:
This week I had a chance to visit Dr. Adrian Cheok and his students at the Mixed Reality Lab at Keio University. The research they’re conducting is based around the notion that in the future technology will shift from today’s ‘Information Age’ to an ‘Experience Age’. Dr. Cheok predicts that we will experience the realities of other people, as opposed to just reading about them, listening to them, or watching a video on a glass screen.
Visiting the Mixed Reality Lab was a refreshing experience. I’ve come to associate terms like ‘Augmented Reality’ with things like Sekai Camera, or the fascinating human Pac-man game that his lab created a few years back [1]. But Dr. Cheok points out quite rightfully – and perhaps surprisingly – that one of the earliest examples of AR was Sony’s Walkman, the first device that allowed people to have their own personal sounds with them all the time.
Beyond Sound and Vision
Once we accept the idea that augmented/mixed-reality is not just limited to vision, then it opens up a whole world of possibilities. And these are the possibilities that Dr. Cheok and his students are researching. He explains:
I became interested to see if we could extend augmented reality to other senses. To touch. At first I made a system for human-to-pet communication. We made a jacket for a chicken that allowed a person to convey touch to a chicken remotely. Then we made Huggy Pajama, which could be used to hug a child remotely [2].
While projects like this might strike us as a little strange — or even wacky — it’s important to note that such projects can be far more practical than you might think at first glance. A version of Huggy Pajama called T Jacket has been subsequently developed for for therapeudic purposes. So for example, a child with autism could be comforted remotely with hugs can be sent over the internet by smartphone.
Readers may recall that we previously featured another remarkable haptic communication project from the Mixed Reality Lab called Ring-u. The idea here is that vibrating messages can be sent over the internet, back and forth between a pair of rings, and there is also now a smartphone interface for the ring as well. This project has perhaps far larger potential in the consumer electronics space, and they’re speaking with toy companies and high-end jewelers about possibile future developments.
Taste the Future
But perhaps the biggest challenge for Dr. Cheok and his team is figuring out how to digitize the other two remaining senses:
Smell and taste are the least explored areas because they usually require chemicals. [But] we think they are important because they can directly affect emotion, mood, and memory, even in a subconscious way. But currently its difficult because things are still analog. This is like it was for music before the CD came along.
Amazingly the team has developed a prototype electric taste machine, and I was lucky to be able to try it out during my visit. The device in its current form is a small box with two protruding metal strips, between which you insert your tongue to experience a variety of tastes. For me some were stronger than others, with lemon and spicy being the strongest. It works by using electric current and temperature to communicate taste, and I experienced what felt like a fraction of the intended tastes – but very impressive. I’m told that in the future, this system could even assume a lollipop-like form, which would certainly be very interesting.
The lab is also collaborating with Japanese startup ChatPerf, which you may recognize as the company that developed a smell-producing attachment for smartphones. They will also conduct a formal academic study to see to what level smell can affect communication between individuals. But even with ChatPerf, the creation of smells is still analog, using cartridges of liquid to emit odors. Later on Dr. Cheok hopes to similate smells in a non-chemical, digital way, noting that it can be done via magnetic stimulation of the olfactory bulb.
So while experiments like these tend to cause lots of laughs and raised eyebrows sometimes, the work is quite important in expanding how we see technology’s role in our lives.
These are just a few of the great projects that the Mixed Reality Lab is working on, and we hope to tell you about others in the future.
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It’s pretty amazing that they made this way back in 2009. ↩
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For more information on this fun huggable chicken project, check out Adrian Cheok: Making a Huggable Internet over on IEEE Spectrum. A demo of Huggy Pajama can be found here. ↩
One ring to hug them all: RingU gives your partner a squeeze over the net
One ring to hug them all: RingU gives your partner a squeeze over the net
Article from Sd Japan
Professor Adrian Cheok of Keio University’s Mixed Reality Lab has been a pioneer in blending the internet and the physical world, producing creations like Petimo, which allows kids to send hugs to each other over the internet; and Huggy Pajama, a similar solution for kids whose parent might be away. Projects from Mixed Reality Lab emphasize the importance of physical touch in a world where communication is drifting away from that particular sense.
Professor Cheok now has a new project in the works that iterates on this philosophy of blending physical touch with the internet. The RingU is another device that transmits these internet hugs, but it does so in a far more compact device. Using a ring connected to your smartphone by Bluetooth, signals can be sent to a paired ring over the internet. You can see a quick overview of RingU in the video below.
When you want to communicate a sort of virtual hug to your partner — and it could be a family member, a lover, or just a good friend — you squeese the ring, and your partner will receive this ‘tele-hug’ in real time. So even when separated by huge distances, you know that a person far away is thinking of you at that very moment. There are even different types of hugs which you can send — mini, intense, and urgent — depending on the situation.
You can also control the color of your partner’s ring according to whatever emotion you’re feeling at the time. There’s also the accompanying mobile app which partners can use as a private social network to share messages, photos, videos, thus complementing your physical hugs with the other types of communication you’ve become used to in this mobile age.
“Being a Professor Will No Longer Be a Viable Career.” | History News Network
“Being a Professor Will No Longer Be a Viable Career.” | History News Network
In the near future there will be no place for average Professors and average universities. The internet will mean everyone from Boston to Botswana can directly get the worlds best education from Harvard, MIT, Yale, etc. On the other hand there will be new leaders who are internet age universities who embrace the internet (like Amazon of universities). The academics who are trying to fight this new reality are like the record companies which tried to fight music going on line.