next up previous
Next: About this document ... Up: Affective Wearables Previous: Acknowledgements

[1]#1

Bibliography

BK77
Roger Brown and James Kulik.
Flashbulb memories.
Cognition, 5:73-99, 1977.

CT90
John T. Cacioppo and Louis G. Tassinary.
Inferring psychological significance from physiological signals.
American Psychologist, 45(1):16-28, Jan. 1990.

Dav93
Richard J. Davidson.
Parsing affective space: Perspectives from neuropsychology and psychophysiology.
Neuropsychology, 7(4):464-475, 1993.

Gol95
D. Goleman.
Emotional Intelligence.
Bantam Books, New York, 1995.

HB96
S. G. Hofmann and D. H. Barlow.
Ambulatory psychophysiological monitoring: A potentially useful tool when treating panic relapse.
Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 3:53-61, 1996.

Hel78
M. Helander.
Applicability of drivers' electrodermal response to the design of the traffic environment.
Journal of Applied Psychology, 63(4):481-488, 1978.

Lev92
R. W. Levenson.
Autonomic nervous system differences among emotions.
American Psychological Society, 3(1):23-27, Jan. 1992.

LGea93
P. J. Lang, M. K. Greenwald, and M. M. Bradley et al.
Looking at pictures: Affective, facial, viseral and behavioral reactions.
Psychophysiology, 30:261-273, 1993.

Man97
Steve Mann.
Wearable computing: A first step toward personal imaging.
Computer, pages 25-31, February 1997.

Pic97
R. W. Picard.
Affective Computing.
The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 1997.

PRG +97
R. Post, M. Reynolds, M. Gray, J. Paradiso, and N. Gershenfeld.
Intrabody buses for data and power.
In Proceedings of the IEEE Conference 'The First International Symposium on Wearable Computing', Cambridge, MA, Oct. 1997. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.

SMR +97
T. Starner, S. Mann, B. Rhodes, J. Levine, J. Healey, D. Kirsch, R. Picard, and A. Pentland.
Augmented reality through wearable computing.
Presence, 6(4):386-398, Winter 1997.

WPK84
W. M. Winton, L. Putnam, and R. Krauss.
Facial and autonomic manifestations of the dimensional structure of emotion.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 20:195-216, 1984.

Zim96
Thomas Zimmerman.
Personal area networks (PAN): Near-field intra-body communication.
IBM Systems Journal, 35:609-618, 1996.



Jennifer Healey - fenn@media.mit.edu
1999-02-12