The Quantified Self
What will life be like when every aspect of your existence is as easy to access as the latest Lady Gaga single?
What will life be like when every aspect of your existence is as easy to access as the latest Lady Gaga single?
We treat even our most mundane lunches as if they were corpses at a crime scene. We photograph them from every angle, update friends, family, and intimate strangers on Facebook with the most salient facts about the chipotle remoulade, then file more detailed reports at Yelp. Instead of just hollering at our TV, we share our jokes about Mitt Romney's debate attire with the rest of the world on Twitter. We review our friends' reviews about the latest newspaper headlines on Tumblr. All of this over-sharing helps marketers, potential bosses, and sometimes even our loved ones know us a little more intimately. But how much of the data we carpet bomb the universe with daily actually comes back to us in the form of self-knowledge?
Sure, using the fossil records you've left at Flickr, blogspot.com, and various other digital tar pits, you may be able to recreate exactly how you spent, say, March 11, 2008. But think about the sort of information that might truly define you and offer a glimpse into your soul. Does the amount of money you've spent on Coke Zero over the last five years equal or exceed your current credit card debt? Do you spend more time complaining about how much you have to clean up after your roommate than you do cleaning up after your roommate? When is your mood consistently higher—after shopping or after church?
When trying to answer questions like that, you may find that you have no more insight into yourself than, say, a person from 1991. Twenty years, or maybe just 20 months from now, that won't be the case. Already, a small but growing number of people are using a small but growing number of devices and apps to meticulously monitor and record their vital signs, their moods, their locations, their physical activities, their financial transactions, in ways that go far beyond the ephemeral "likes" and lulz of online lives. In 2008, Wired co-founder Kevin Kelly and Wired contributing editor Gary Wolf noticed this trend toward self-tracking and created a website called The Quantified Self to document it. The site has since spawned meet-up groups in 23 cities around the world where individuals convene to talk about what sort of data they're amassing on themselves, and—one imagines—to take copious notes.
To some degree, we all self-track. We step on a scale, we jot diary entries in Moleskines, we may even keep fairly comprehensive logs of the miles we cycle or run and the calories we burn in the process. But just as channel-surfing grew infinitely easier in the wake of the remote control, but then infinitely more compelling as the number of channels exploded, so goes self-tracking. The $149 Zeo Sleep Coach monitors your brain's electrical waves while you snooze and quantifies how long you spent in the various levels of sleep. The $99 Fitbit tracks the number of steps you take each day, estimates the calories you burn, and automatically uploads this information to your computer when you get near it. The Withings Wifi Body Scale takes your weight and body-fat readings and sends them wirelessly to your computer. The company's Smart Blood Pressure Monitor jacks into your iPhone. A start-up called Green Goose is making a set of stickers embedded with motion sensors that will allow you to track how often you brush your teeth, how many times a day you open the refrigerator door, etc. The website trackyourhappiness.org sends you questionnaires via email three times each day to determine your mood. A company called Affectiva is working on a wristband that measures "emotional arousal."
What will life be like when every quantifiable aspect of your existence is as easy to access as the latest Lady Gaga single? Traditionally, our faulty perceptions and memories have had their own kind of utility. Forgetting is the highest form of forgiving, and our inability to pinpoint exactly how we deploy our energies and resources allows us to live comfortably in the face of our own mediocrity. We may never achieve quite what we want to achieve, but at least the reasons underlying our failures aren't constantly triggering our cellphones to send us messages telling us to shape up. In the future, when you contemplate why you've never quite gotten around to writing that novel, you'll know exactly how you frittered away your life. And because we'll be sharing much of the information we collect on ourselves, you'll also know that it took Stephen King exactly as many minutes to write his latest novel as you spent playing Angry Birds over the last three years.
But if "self knowledge through numbers," which is how Kevin Kelly and Gary Wolf characterize the ultimate ends of self-tracking, sounds painful, it offers some hope as well. While some self-trackers merely seek to understand themselves more accurately, a great number have tangible self-improvement in mind. Some want to use their time more productively. Others aim to cure maladies such as migraines by methodically documenting the conditions when flare-ups arise and when they don't.
In this respect, self-tracking has a natural affinity with choice architecture, the notion that product designers or governments or other entities that shape our world can design it in ways that make it easier for us to make good choices. The more we scrutinize our behavior, the more likely we are to discern where prompts and reminders might best steer us in the directions we desire. For example, the Fitbit device can send a message to your cellphone if the day is coming to an end and you have yet to reach your daily steps goal. Our bathroom scales will eventually start calling out to us if we go too many days without stepping on them. Green Goose envisions turning various virtuous activities you might pursue—cycling to work, walking the dog, etc.—into games where you compete against family and friends to see who can amass the most points.
In this vision, individuals turn the traditional notion of surveillance on its head: By intimately monitoring themselves, they increase control over their own lives, liberate themselves from unwanted habits, pursue their goals with maximum insight—and thus better their chances of success.
An even more profound impact may be coming on the way companies end up marketing their products and services. While consumer advocates and privacy advocates already worry that we're offering too much information to global mega-corporations looking for new ways to exploit our weaknesses, self-tracking may not end up working quite as anticipated.
In the Internet age, power has already shifted massively from producers to consumers, thanks to the ability to critique and compare purchases on sites like Amazon and Yelp. Right now, however, we tend to base our assessments on qualitative perceptions—the food was delicious, the plumber was punctual and seemed to know what he was talking about, etc. But imagine when restaurant reviews start to incorporate the kind of information self-trackers are beginning to keep. Soon, we'll know if the sea urchin panna cotta at the French Laundry inspires a greater leap in heart rate than the quail egg with caviar and cedar smoke at The Ritz-Carlton. We'll know which yoga teacher's students sleep most soundly at night. We'll know which activity is most likely to lead to sex on a first date—an art gallery opening or a night at the bowling alley.
Suddenly, all the old measures that have been used to determine value and satisfaction will no longer be quite as relevant. They'll still matter—offering a good deal and a pleasant experience will presumably lead to better experiences for customers and thus better stats from self-trackers. But the criteria used to assess and select products and services won't be based on intellectual perceptions, which can be readily influenced by external forces. Branding, marketing, and even qualitative customer reviews will give way to reports based on blood pressure rates, galvanic skin response, and quantified self-esteem. Instead of thinking with our flighty, emotional, easy-to-manipulate brains, we'll be feeling with our rational, measurable, hard-to-manipulate guts, crowning victors and condemning also-rans to failure based on what truly satisfies us most. Formerly intrusive marketers will run from us screaming, eyes shut, hands covering their ears, longing for the days when they had no idea what makes us tick.
Contributing Editor Greg Beato writes from San Francisco.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Speaking of tracking: The Washington Times' well-written take on Fast and Furious. (The tracking comes from the feds lack of tracking the guns they illegally supplied Mexican drug cartels with.
Somebody in law enforcement had to "just follow orders" for this 90-year old woman to be put in the slammer for maintaining her own property the way she sees fit.
Finally! A TSA Officer I wouldn't mind meeting so I could shake his hand. Note the silly little pot jokes throughout the article. Not that I ever took Forbes seriously, but "C'mon Son."
Is it Afternoon Links already?
Some forty year old dude couldn't do any better than the damaged goods known as Britney Spears.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvs.....awick.html
Don't you mean, no forty year old dude could do any better?
No, I mean she's damaged goods and I don't know why anyone would want that piece of trailer trash.
$$$$$$, duh. She just bought him a $40K bike.
I don't think dude's hurting for cash.
Why do you even care?
But just as channel-surfing grew infinitely easier in the wake of the remote control, but then infinitely more compelling as the number of channels exploded...
Channel surfing got more compelling? Just more tedious, with more dreck to sort through.
Fucking Favorites Lists, how do they work?
"We'll know which activity is most likely to lead to sex on a first date?an art gallery opening or a night at the bowling alley."
What is this - the local news? 'Killer bees attach nudist colony - film after these messages from our sponsers....'
It must be the bowling alley....but how about some confirmation!??!!!
Too many variables. Depends on the gallery show, and the woman in question. Yeah, you can a run an average across the population, but that's worthless when dealing with specific individuals. If you had a database of whether Suzie Q. Random put out after an art gallery or bowling date, sure. But that kind of database is called 'stalking'.
Or, anymore, reading her Facebook stream.
According to the OKCupid people, if you want a proxy question for "will you sleep with me on the first date", the best non-sexual question to ask is "do you like beer?".
That question had the highest correlation.
No matter their gender or orientation, beer-lovers are 60% more likely to be okay with sleeping with someone they've just met. Sadly, this is the only question with a meaningful correlation for women.
linky
Being perpetually drunk can do that to you.
I'll take "No Shit Sherlock" for 200 Alex.
Which one of them involves more drinking? I've been to gallery openings and ended up fucked up. I've been to bowling alleys and gone home relatively sober.
considering the beer selection at most bowling alleys, going home sober is pretty much the default.
hoo-yah. I went to a frickin' poetry reading and ended up getting sloshed like a soldier on leave. Yes, the poetry was that bad.
"We'll know which activity is most likely to lead to sex on a first date?an art gallery opening or a night at the bowling alley."
If you're a good bowler take her bowling. I you know art take her to a gallery.
Most guys would assume it depends on the girl, as in which activity she finds more enjoyable. The real answer is it depends on the guy. The point of a first date is to let her have opportunities to see him doing things confidently and expertly, and preferably having fun doing them.
Wouldn't that put most dates at a strip club?
"You'll also know that it took Stephen King exactly as many minutes to write his latest novel as you spent playing Angry Birds over the last three years."
That man writes pretty bleeping fast.
"You'll also know that it took Stephen King exactly as many minutes to write his latest novel as you spent playing Angry Birds over the last three years."
Well, for me it would be RPGs and other games on the XBox.
My response is WTF does it matter? Bully for Mr. King. Bully for me because I still make my own pretty good living even with the leisure time to play games. It basically takes the time that TV and other trivialities used to gobble up. If I enjoyed myself and King enjoyed himself, who the hell cares?
Whose idea was it that every waking minute has to be contribute to some sort of productivity metric? Am I the only one who works hard at his job and career in order to *have* leisure time to enjoy whatever pointless endeavor I damn well please?
Personally, I'm having a hard time regarding Stephen King's last novel as something productive.
people still read Stephen King?
Now there is a dude that really seems to know what he is talking about. Wow.
http://www.RealPrivacy.tk
btw when I eat a banana or whole cucumber, I like to pretend it's a penis and make love to it with my mouth. I'm not gay, I just wonder what it would be like.
Uh huh people who make statements like that always qualify it with "i'm not gay"
sure pal, whatever you say. (Not that there's anything wrong with that)
Say hello to someone special ? Yoko is our very first model from the beautiful South East Asian country, Vietnam.
She is a rare beauty with an ultra-petite frame, long raven hair and silky, smooth skin. She has a shy charming smile that will instantly win your heart.
Yoko only started modeling nude very recently and, fortunately for us, she says it turns her on! She really loves the feeling of being naked and the freedom she feels when modeling nude. She surprised even herself by loving it so much!
Yoko hopes she can show the world the beauty of Vietnamese woman ? we think she already has!
A stunning addition to the Hegre model team we know you are just going to love Yoko!
Welcome along Hungarian model Orsi. Petter Hegre had to spend a good amount of time pursuing Orsi to bring her here to Hegre-Art.com. But we are sure you will agree it was a worthwhile process!
Brunette Orsi is an experienced model but very rarely poses nude. And even then it is usually for top publications such as Perfect 10, FHM and Matador. With her perfect proportions it is easy to see why she is in such high demand.
Orsi is a very calm, confident and classy girl. She is intelligent and refined and is presently in her third year at university studying architecture. They say that men don't make passes at girls who wear glasses but when Orsi puts on her spectacles she looks like the sexiest school teacher you could ever wish to meet!
The perfect combination of brains and natural beauty, Hegre-Art is proud to have this exquisite model join the team.
"Instead of thinking with our flighty, emotional, easy-to-manipulate brains, we'll be feeling with our rational, measurable, hard-to-manipulate guts, crowning victors and condemning also-rans to failure based on what truly satisfies us most."
Apparently my brain and the brains to which you refer are quite different. I don't believe there will ever be any technology capable of supplanting the benefit of my organic, self-contained cognition. My brain is already capable of monitoring my actions, and my emotions, in a far superior manner than any modern technology named in this article. The potential of my brain would be wasted in merely reading the data from such technologies.
Anyway, the strangest thing about this article is that it seems only to have relevance under the premise that brains, in general, have been futile in the pursuit of solving one's problems in the past, disregarding the extensive evidence to the contrary.
Incidentally, I have never even attempted to access the latest Lady Gaga single.
A company called Affectiva is working on a wristband that measures "emotional arousal."
But you don't wear it on your wrist.
Despite having a beautiful face with piercing blue eyes you may, or may not, be surprised to hear that Melissa is a proud winner of the "Miss Ass" title - an annual competition that is held on the British Virgin Islands!
With stunning long hair, a muscular, toned body and incredibly perky tits Melissa's body just cries out to be photographed. In her physical prime Melissa likes to keep in shape and views her body as a temple. She chooses her foods carefully making sure everything contributes to optimum health.
Because Melissa has a powerful frame it would be easy to believe that she is a tough kind of girl, but Melissa is actually more the emotional type. The taut, toned body conceals a much softer centre!
Naturally stunning and sexy, we know you are going to enjoy admiring all of Melissa's perfectly petite body!
yaho
Thanks
Right? As soon as this happened I just thought about people who were in the middle of Steps or multi-round satellites...either leave the country and gain internet access, or somehow exchange your seat to someone who can use it for a nominal fee.
Download Salah Eldin Game
download gta game