| Steve Mann |
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| 1962 births | |
| living people | |
| canadian scientists | |
| cyborgs | |
| human-computer interaction researchers | |
| mcmaster university alumni | |
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EDUCATION Mann holds degrees from the Massachusetts Institute Of Technology (PhD in Media Arts and Sciences '97) and McMaster University , where he was also inducted into the McMaster University Alumni Hall of Fame, Alumni Gallery, 2004, in recognition of his career as an inventor and teacher.1 While at MIT he was one of the founding members of the Wearable Computers group in the Media Lab.2 In 2004 he was named the recipient of the 2004 Leonardo Award for Excellence for his article "Existential Technology," published in Leonardo 36:1.3 IDEAS AND INVENTIONS
Mann also works in the fields of Computer-mediated Reality . He is a strong advocate of Privacy rights, for which work he was an award recipient of the Chalmers Foundation in the fine arts. His work also extends to the area of Sousveillance (a term he coined for "inverse surveillance"). Mann and one of his PhD students, James Fung, together with some of his other students, have been building a cyborg community around the CyborGLOGGING concept.7
MANN AS CYBORG '', Peter Lynch made a movie, '' Cyberman '', about Mann's life and inventions. While some describe him as the founder of the field of Wearable Computing based on his early work in personal imaging, there is controversy surrounding the exact definition of wearable computing, and whether any one person can be considered to have invented it. For example, wearable computer imaging systems were described, hypothetically (not actually reduced to practice) by Vannevar Bush in his essay " As We May Think " in the '' Atlantic Monthly '' in July 1945 . Wearable devices for timing the trajectory of the balls on a roulette table were built and used by Ed Thorp and Claude Shannon who first published their work in 1966 , but it is uncertain whether these devices could be considered computers, in the modern-day interpretation of a computer as a general purpose device (any more than one might consider a windup wristwatch to be a computer, i.e. although it computes and displays time, what makes something really a computer is its generality of purpose). Likewise, an abacus worn around the neck on a string could be called a wearable computer, but it's not quite in the spirit of Mann's idea of a general purpose device worn during all waking moments. Predecessors like the wristwatch, the shoe-based gambling timers, etc., were used for computation of specific tasks, whereas Mann's invention was a general-purpose field programmable computer inserted into the visual reality stream of all day-to-day tasks. ANONEQUITY PROJECT (MANN, KERR, AND OTHERS) He was the subject of a widely-publicized post-9/11 incident where Canadian airport security forcibly removed many of his wearable devices. As a result of this incident, Mann consulted with a number of researchers including Kerr, who is , and Sousveillance , in addition to issues related to cyborg-law. The anonequity project is ongoing, and collaborator Kerr has also researched and lectured widely on implantable technologies. On March 14 , 2002 , Mann received world-wide news attention when The New York Times reported on an incident in which he was detained by security personnel at St. John's International Airport in Newfoundland , Canada while preparing to board an Air Canada flight to Toronto . {Link without Title} (requires free signup incl. email address) The article reported that Mann was strip-searched and his electronic implants were forcibly removed, disorienting him sufficiently to necessitate that he use a wheelchair. At the time, Mann's lawyer reportedly estimated the value of the lost equipment at $56,800,11 and Mann has claimed that doctors advised him that the separation from his implants (some of which he had lived with for many years) could lead to brain damage.12 The effects of separation from long-term adaptation are currently being researched, using this result as a case study, along with other similar results, in addition to research on developing better technology for implantable interfaces that is less detectable, and uses wireless connections to the body worn computer. After the incident, Mann also became a test subject for researchers developing new brain imaging methodologies based on FMRI. Technology philosopher Paul Virilio reported on Mann's inventions and work, as well as this incident, in his book Crepuscular Dawn.13 PUBLICATIONS Mann is author of more than 200 publications, including a textbook on electric eyeglasses and a popular culture book on day-to-day Cyborg living. Selected works:
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