Augmented Ops artwork

Emerging Interfaces for Human Augmentation

Augmented Ops

English - June 16, 2021 07:00 - 51 minutes - 35.4 MB - ★★★★★ - 52 ratings
Technology Business Management technology industry iot iiot supply chain business future of work skills manufacturing mit Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed


Augmented reveals the stories behind the new era of industrial operations, where technology will restore the agility of frontline workers. 

In episode 24 of the podcast, the topic is: Emerging Interfaces for Human Augmentation. Our guest is Pattie Maes, Professor at the MIT Media Lab.

In this conversation, we talk about Augmenting people instead of using or making smart machines, AI summers and AI winters, parallels between AI and expert systems and why we didn't learn our lessons, enabling people to perform better through fluid, interactive, immersive and wearable systems that are easy to use, how lab thinks about developing new form factors, and much more.

After listening to this episode, check out MIT Media Lab as well as Pattie Maes's social profile:

MIT Media Lab: @medialab (Twitter): https://www.media.mit.edu/ (web)Pattie Maes: https://www.media.mit.edu/people/pattie/overview/ 

Trond's takeaway: "Augmenting people is far more complex than developing a technology or even experimenting with form factors. Instead, there's a whole process to exploring what humans are all about, discovering opportunities for augmentation and tweaking it in dialogue with users. The Media Lab's approach is work intensive, but when new products make it out of there, they tend to extend a human function as opposed to becoming just a new gadget."

Thanks for listening. If you liked the show, subscribe at Augmentedpodcast.co or in your preferred podcast player, and rate us with five stars. If you liked this episode, you might also like episode 19, Machine Learning in Manufacturing, episode 7, Work of the Future, or episode 13, Get Manufacturing Superpowers

Augmented--industrial conversations.





Twitter Mentions