Not exact matches
Based on ResearchKit, University of Rochester is developing an app called mPower that can use the data it gathers
to assess the
level of Parkinson's disease by simply
listening to the user's
voice.
Scientists also had the patients
listen to familiar and non-familiar
voices tell different stories
to get a baseline MRI of how the blood oxygen
levels in their brains changed while
listening.
In my book The
Listening Leader: Creating the Conditions for Equitable School Transformation, I offer a reframing of data that encourages educators
to treat human experience, and particularly student
voice, as sources of data, which I divide into three
levels.
For example, if a user sets the volume at the highest
level while
listening to music, the Google Assistant's
voice will also have the same
level of volume.