HCMar 18, 2025
Sensory-driven microinterventions for improved health and wellbeingYoussef Abdalla, Elia Gatti, Mine Orlu et al.
The five senses are gateways to our wellbeing and their decline is considered a significant public health challenge which is linked to multiple conditions that contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality. Modern technology, with its ubiquitous nature and fast data processing has the ability to leverage the power of the senses to transform our approach to day to day healthcare, with positive effects on our quality of life. Here, we introduce the idea of sensory-driven microinterventions for preventative, personalised healthcare. Microinterventions are targeted, timely, minimally invasive strategies that seamlessly integrate into our daily life. This idea harnesses human's sensory capabilities, leverages technological advances in sensory stimulation and real-time processing ability for sensing the senses. The collection of sensory data from our continuous interaction with technology - for example the tone of voice, gait movement, smart home behaviour - opens up a shift towards personalised technology-enabled, sensory-focused healthcare interventions, coupled with the potential of early detection and timely treatment of sensory deficits that can signal critical health insights, especially for neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease.
CLJun 5, 2024
Exploring Human-AI Perception Alignment in Sensory Experiences: Do LLMs Understand Textile Hand?Shu Zhong, Elia Gatti, Youngjun Cho et al.
Aligning large language models (LLMs) behaviour with human intent is critical for future AI. An important yet often overlooked aspect of this alignment is the perceptual alignment. Perceptual modalities like touch are more multifaceted and nuanced compared to other sensory modalities such as vision. This work investigates how well LLMs align with human touch experiences using the "textile hand" task. We created a "Guess What Textile" interaction in which participants were given two textile samples -- a target and a reference -- to handle. Without seeing them, participants described the differences between them to the LLM. Using these descriptions, the LLM attempted to identify the target textile by assessing similarity within its high-dimensional embedding space. Our results suggest that a degree of perceptual alignment exists, however varies significantly among different textile samples. For example, LLM predictions are well aligned for silk satin, but not for cotton denim. Moreover, participants didn't perceive their textile experiences closely matched by the LLM predictions. This is only the first exploration into perceptual alignment around touch, exemplified through textile hand. We discuss possible sources of this alignment variance, and how better human-AI perceptual alignment can benefit future everyday tasks.