Professor Alex “Sandy” Pentland
What if you could see yourself as others see you? What if we could have
a “gods eye” view of how the people in our workgroup interact? Or “see”
everyone in our town? Or even our entire country? Now you can, by
using the reality mining technology Sandy and his colleagues have
developed
over the last decade.
Every time you use your cell phone, you leave behind a few bits of
information. The phone pings the nearest cell-phone towers, revealing
its location. Your service provider records the duration of your call
and the number dialed. And the newest smart phones can collect even
more information about their users, recording everything from their
physical activity to their conversational cadences.
People are — rightfully — nervous about trailing these sorts
of
digital bread crumbs
behind them. But the same information could help solve identity theft
and fraud by automatically determining security settings. More
significantly, cell-phone data can shed light on workplace dynamics and
on the well-being of communities. It could even help project the course
of disease outbreaks and provide clues about individuals’ health.
The key to harnessing the power of reality mining technology is that
subtle patterns in how we interact with other people reveal our
attitudes toward them. These biologically based “honest signaling”
mechanisms, including a person’s activity level, how the timing of their
actions is influenced by others, and the amount of mimicry they display,
offer an unmatched window into our intentions, goals, and values.
By understanding these subtle patterns we can accurately predict the
outcomes of situations ranging from job interviews to first dates. We
can also “read” our social networks to become better friends, family
members, workers, and communicators, as explained in his forthcoming
book Honest Signals, published by MIT Press.
Alex “Sandy” Pentland is a pioneer in organizational engineering,
mobile information systems, and computational social science. Sandy’s
focus is the development of human-centered technology, and the creation
of ventures that take this technology into the real world. His work
provides people with a clearer picture of their social
environment, and helps companies and communities to reinvent themselves
to be both more human and productive.
He directs the MIT Media Lab’s
Digital Life Consortium, a group of more
than twenty multinational corporations exploring new ways to innovate,
and is Founder of MIT’s
Legatum Center for Development and Entrepreneurship,
established to support aspiring entrepreneurs in
emerging markets. In 1997, Newsweek magazine named him one of the 100
Americans likely to shape the century.
Sandy authored
Automatic Mapping and Modeling of Human Networks,
Socially Aware Computation and Communication, and the
innovative Amazon download
Wearable Intelligence: A Scientific American article,
coauthored
Thin Slices of Negotiation: Predicting Outcomes From Conversational
Dynamics Within the First 5 Minutes and
Social Network Computing,
edited
From Pixels to Predicates: Recent Advances in Computational and
Robotic
Vision,
and coedited
Computer Vision for Human-Machine Interaction and
Artificial Intelligence for Human Computing: ICMI 2006 and IJCAI 2007
International Workshops: Banff, Canada, November 3, 2006 and Hyderabad,
India,
January 6, 2007.
Watch
Gadgetoff 2007 – Sandy Pentland.
MIT Insider: Sociometrics,
Training Leaders,
LifeWear: Can Mobile Systems Enrich Your Social and Healthcare
Interactions?,
Collective Intelligence, and
Innovation Everywhere — Why the World Isn’t Flat Enough.
Read
Reality Mining,
The Science of Subtle Signals, and
MIT to Tutor Emerging Leaders.