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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Eventi DIAG
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DTSTART:20251026T030000
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RDATE:20261025T030000
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DTSTART:20260329T020000
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UID:calendar.30788.field_data.0@www.diag.uniroma1.it
DTSTAMP:20260519T085405Z
CREATED:20260504T131133Z
DESCRIPTION:Artificial intelligence and social media have justifiably raise
 d alarms about the dangers posed to humanity — and the risks are real. But
  framing our relationship with technology purely through the lens of fear 
 misses a fundamental possibility: that technology can extend human capabil
 ity rather than supplant it. Distance need not mean disconnection. Sensory
  impairment need not mean exclusion. Cognitive overload need not mean erro
 r.Drawing on research from the Shared Reality Lab at McGill University\, I
  examine how carefully engineered human-computer systems can bridge these 
 gaps. Spanning applications in telepresence\, assistive technology for bli
 nd and low-vision users\, multimodal patient vital sign monitoring in the 
 OR and ICU\, and decision support for pilots and air traffic controllers\,
  I argue that the most powerful role for technology is not to replace huma
 n judgment — but to give humans the perceptual and cognitive resources to 
 exercise it well. Across these domains\, a common design philosophy emerge
 s: the best interfaces demand less attention\, restoring situational aware
 ness and re-establishing the shared reality that distance\, disability\, o
 r information overload has disrupted. In an era preoccupied with what tech
 nology might take from us\, this talk makes the case for what it can give 
 back.
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260526T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260526T110000
LAST-MODIFIED:20260504T132007Z
LOCATION:Aula Magna
SUMMARY:Not Replacement\, But Extension: Engineering Technology to Amplify 
 Human Judgment - Jeremy Cooperstock
URL;TYPE=URI:https://www.diag.uniroma1.it/node/30788
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