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{{Project Infobox|Self researchers=|Related tools=|Related topics= Diet and weight loss, Sports and fitness, Food tracking }}
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{{Project Infobox|Self researchers=|Related tools=|Related topics= Mood, Stress, Productivity }}
intro text
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This project has been imported from the [https://quantifiedself.com/show-and-tell/ Quantified Self Show & Tell library]. The talk was given at EVENT on DATE.
  
 
==Description==
 
==Description==
Rob Portil is sixty-six years old and has been overweight twice in his life. He used FitBit for four months to help him reach his target weight. In this video, describes how he experiences the daily tracking, how his sweetheart experiences it differently, which Four Hour Body workouts he does, and some key eating tricks he learned along the way.
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A description of this project as introduced by Quantified Self follows:
 +
 
 +
<blockquote>Jenny Tillotson is a researcher and fashion designer who is currently exploring how scent plays a role in emotion and psychological states. As someone living with bipolar disorder, she’s been acutely aware of what affects her own emotions states and has been exploring different methods to track them. In this talk, presented at the 2014 Quantified Self Europe Conference, Jenny discusses her new project, Sensory Fashion, that uses wearable tracking technology and scent and sensory science to improve wellbeing. </blockquote>
  
 
==Video and Transcription==
 
==Video and Transcription==
Rob Portil
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{{#widget:Vimeo|id=100583400|url=https://vimeo.com/100583400}}
Weight Loss and Muscle Gain with Fitbit
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A transcript of this talk is below:
 
 
So this should be of some interest to most of you; weight loss and muscle gain with Fitbit. In my life I have been overweight twice and never severely overweight, but at one time 25 pounds overweight, and recently 10 or 15 pounds overweight.
 
I lost 10 pounds of fat and added five pounds of muscle in six months. This is a little device you’ve seen somewhere here, or people talking about, it’s called Fitbit. I have nothing to do with this company but I’m a big advocate of it.
 
What I did?
 
I decided I was getting overweight. I was about 165 pounds, which I though was great because that’s what I had been for many years. But then I realized that infact that was my college weight when I had a lot more muscle and I’m now 66 years old. And I was an inch shorter than I used to be. I have scoliosis in my spine, so I’m a little shorter than I was. So I’m now 165 pounds was starting to fall over my belt. So I decided 155 pounds, my high school weight was more ideal and would probably look better.
 
I started using the Fitbit and tracked the calories burned; this is really just a pedometer on steroids. So it tracks everything. It tracks my movement all day long and it tracks my sleep at night. I wear it on my wrist and it actually gives me some indication of quality of sleep.
 
I use their website and a Fitbit iPhone app; either one to track weight, so every day I put in weight and I put in what I eat. I tried in the past a lot of online things with food trackers in them and they’re all pains in the butt.
 
This one is very simple to use. I spend less than 60 seconds a day putting in all my meals for the day. And it just takes seconds for me to put it in.
 
What happened?
 
I went from 166 pounds down to 155 pounds, so I did exactly what I wanted to do. I got to 155 pounds and went okay, I used to have size 34 pants and I’m now wearing a size 33 pants which was great, but I decided there was no reason not to carry it a little bit further. And again using some pieces from Timothy Ferris’s book For Our Body, I decided that I could bring muscle back up and still keep the weight down.
 
In the course of that I just added a few things, and did two 30 minute workouts a week, so an hour a week, four hours a month.
 
Exercises I won’t go through everything, but this whole routine takes less than 30 minutes. It includes my usual yoga routine in the morning and then some of the exercises and pushing them to absolute failure. But it still only takes a minute and a half, two minutes to do that.
 
I went from 155 pounds to 160 pounds. Waist measurement actually went down another inch; these are size 32 pants. The biceps actually went up by an inch, the waist went down.
 
What did I learn?
 
Tracking alone creates mindfulness. So Quantified Self what’s it about? So for me it was about if you are doing any amount of real tracking and looking at what you’re doing, you get more mindful about what it is that you’re doing.
 
Tracking must be easy to do. Why was I using the Fitbit? It turns out that for me and if you’re tracking and I’ve read this before that if you get into the habit of doing something like daily tracking, after a couple of weeks and somewhere between a couple of weeks and a month is where it turns into a real habit and you’re doing it all the time.
 
My love and I are both very addicted to it at the moment. She won’t go to bed without the Fitbit on and we track her sleep all the time. She feels as alone without the Fitbit than she does without the iPhone.
 
What else did I learn?
 
Activity; this is what a day on the Fitbit looks like. It tracks all of your movement, and it very clearly indicates in a crude way but a very effective way about how many miles you travel, how many steps you took, and what the level of that activity was.
 
So this is a day, it’s a normal day without doing anything else, without exercise routine and without a walk. Here is a day with a walk; look at the difference. All of a sudden we’re at that 4.19 miles instead of 2.2 miles. We’re at 24,000 calories, almost 25,000 calories burned instead of 21,000 calories burned, and you can see that I walked to lunch and walked back from lunch and at a fairly brisk rate, so it actually shows the activity level is higher. It doesn’t take a lot to do that, to work that into your routine.
 
I learned what 2,000 calories really looks like, and that’s an odd statement and you can ask me more about it in the Q and A., but it’s like all of a sudden that I thought I was probably eating somewhere around 2,000 calories. The average American eats about 3,000 and that’s why they keep gaining weight.
 
And I finally got to realise that I was probably eating around 2,300 calories every day. And I now know that when a meal comes to me I get a real sense of what a real portion should look like, that a portion of meat should be the size of your fist, a portion of vegetable should be the size of your fist.
 
A great diet for me is protein rich and vegetable rich, so eating more vegetables makes a huge difference. Eating a larger meal at lunch versus dinner makes a huge difference in whether or not that you’re going to gain weight.
 
Fitbit had one other added piece that caused me to learn a lot; what my sleep looked like at night. So again it tracks movement and it’s pretty easy to see. Here is what they class as 97% efficiency. It took me three minutes to fall asleep. Got up to go to the bathroom once, and only a couple of other times in that evening did I even turn over.
 
This is a different kind of night. This is restless night. This is the difference between good sleep and not good sleep and this isn’t one of the worst days. I mean I’ve got some that just look horrible, and those almost always occurred after me eating dinner later or having sugar at that dinner.
 
So a couple of rules came from that. One which is I never go to bed less than four hours after my dinner, and I never have desserts at dinner.
 
So OrbitalWeb is my company so if you just remember OrbitalWeb/qs if you want to download the slides you can have those slides.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
<blockquote>I’m Jenny and I’m going to talk to you about my science fashion project or I call it my science fashion story, and I’m a reader of sensory fantasy fashion at St. Martins and I wasn tto talk to you about biofeedback scent interventions, so it’s really introducing scent to wearable technology.
 +
I’ve just finished the Winston Churchill Travel Fellowship which was a project very much donated to myself for a personal crusade to design behavior change to benefit me with many hat’s on as an entrepreneur, as a designer because I have bipolar. I’ve had bipolar for about 20 years and while the projects been informed with living with bipolar because sometimes I become mute. I lose a lot of confidence which is ironic really because obviously fashion is a lot about self-expression.
 +
And what drive me are really my three children and my husband. He also has bipolar and I’m bipolar to, so we’re trying to find a way to reduce the triggers, improve sleep, and reduce stress.
 +
So the project is called sensory fashion and it’s building stress management using scent, using wearable technology to breakdown many issues that I have with anxiety and sleep and to induce positive states and to reduce the risk of a bipolar relapse. So for example, these are mood swings and if I can keep within the green central line then there is less likely of having a relapse if I can reduce stress and help sleep, so I call it keeping green and prevent the triggers.
 +
And so smell, smell is a very personal thing but it’s also very direct to the limbic system what’s on the top of your nose. And so you cannot turn it off and it’s actually very powerful and very evocative and so I’m using this as an immediate goal is to build a customized scent bubble with this technology which is very near the nose to find a calming method to reduce stress, performance, anxiety, sweat when I get sort of stressed. And I’m inspired by science fiction, and I want to quickly put this in. Aldous Huxley and his new world scent organ and creating this sort of scent magical reality in a can by Philip Caddick if you know the story. And a lot of it is inspired by Terry Mooglers fashion, he said fashion will change dramatically in the coming years. It will be more human, closer to the needs of the people in terms of their well-being and not in terms of them not showing and that was 30 years ago.
 +
So what I am doing. I am building these tools, and it’s an experimental project and I’m creating the convergence of ancient perfumery with emerging technologies. So you’ve got wearable tech, the miniaturization of lab on a chip, micro-fluid, and smell. Smell communication.
 +
So if you look at the history, the Egyptians used to wear scent waxes on their head, and the French introduced alcohol to perfume. And what I’m doing is completely getting rid of all that and creating a sort of microchip ultimately, it’s sort of an e-scent microchip, which is controlled scent on a chip.
 +
And it’s focusing on aromachology, which is the science of fragrance, it’s not aromatherapy. This is where the data is on aromachology, which is the story of aroma and how it has an effect on human psychology and behavior. There is only really a handful of scents that there is evidence to show this.
 +
So these are some of my earlier projects; Smart second skin, which were installations and various sorts of scent, exhibitions and prototypes that I used without technology. This is actually without the wearable technology.
 +
These are some working prototypes with biosensors – they weren’t biofeedback, but they were devices that released scent in response to a stimulus on various wearable devices that create these personalized scent bubble right near the nose.
 +
So the real time biofeedback scent interventions that I’m leaning towards, the idea is that you can track mood and sleep, and then the escent device will release counteracting scents to relieve tension when stress levels get to a certain threshold. Then you need to know which scent and how you’re feeling obviously.
 +
So I have worked with Philips, this is one of my partners and this was a Fellowship where we were looking at various different ideas for their sleep and stress businesses and putting into their mood therapy lamps and wake-up lamps. And this is the idea of having a sort of pending that releases scent to help you sleep and lavender would be the most obvious one, because there is evidence to show that can help with relaxation. And this was with Cardiff University, because they are actually on the doorstep to a lot of these aromas.
 +
Then it will have something to wake you up in the morning and you could have a pendant and perhaps sitting on the pillow and that will be releasing a citrus scent to stimulate and energize you, and peppermint to keep you awake throughout the day.
 +
So what did I learn? Well, the Fellowship was really a way to raise mental health awareness, and teaching me how to read communicate, because I think that was a lot of the problem with the bipolar and depression. I lost a lot of confidence, and I’ve been able to start a lot of new fashion and communication projects; many of what I am commercializing. And I was also able to experiment with many of these oils that kind of help reduce stress, help me sleep, and sort of help with the yoga and just generally take care of myself.
 +
So this is the scents that I’ll be using with the new delivery systems, as I develop. So with the Fellowship, I was able to take and travel around and meet various Californian psychiatrists and these are some of the comments that it’s really going to help with the prodrome intervention before you have the little shifts that gets to the bigger shifts. And as a kind of warning system, so you can release the scent to build your own therapeutic rainbow depending how you are feeling. So it’s a very personalized system, and obviously it’s not for everyone. You need to know which scents would potentially work if you’re feeling angry.
 +
But it’s also creating this scent clock as well and you can have this built into your watch, or clothing or whatever it might be, and releasing it in the morning for example, and something at night-time. So it’s very much in tuned with your own body, so I call that the smart second skin and it’s tailored to move.
 +
What I’m learning as well is that with the scent bubble, releasing the scent there is actually some science behind this, depending on the odor threshold of how much scent is released from the perfume you know, top base and middle note, so that’s kind of interesting project as that developed. So only a very small amount is release, and depending on the actual aroma that this does actually work.
 +
So my long-term goal is to use electronic note sensors and that would be the ideal, to embed these into your clothing and that would detect stress related body odor which is the very fatty odors when we are very very stressed, and to create the scent bubble.
 +
And what I hope to do then is test and measure the actual earwax, which has body odor, and to find out if there are stress levels in there. There is certainly with blue whales, they know that when they are stressed there is a lot of stress related body odor in their canal.
 +
So this just shows how will develop with these tracking obviously, which I haven’t started and I will do when I have got the scent delivery system, but tracking smell is the key thing and the actual stress related body odor and then how that works with the scent bubble as you are monitoring your mood.
 +
So there is many many many other applications for this sort of technology, for memory recall and dementia. As a CBT cyber tool for behaviour change obviously, and then for curbing appetite and enhancing appetite which would work with QS diagnosing disease.
 +
And really, that’s it; there you are with the rainbow and the scent bubble. Thank you very much.</blockquote>
 
{{Project Queries}}
 
{{Project Queries}}

Latest revision as of 15:31, 1 March 2023

Project Infobox Question-icon.png
Self researcher(s)
Related tools
Related topics Mood, Stress, Productivity

Builds on project(s)
Has inspired Projects (0)

This project has been imported from the Quantified Self Show & Tell library. The talk was given at EVENT on DATE.

Description[edit | edit source]

A description of this project as introduced by Quantified Self follows:

Jenny Tillotson is a researcher and fashion designer who is currently exploring how scent plays a role in emotion and psychological states. As someone living with bipolar disorder, she’s been acutely aware of what affects her own emotions states and has been exploring different methods to track them. In this talk, presented at the 2014 Quantified Self Europe Conference, Jenny discusses her new project, Sensory Fashion, that uses wearable tracking technology and scent and sensory science to improve wellbeing.

Video and Transcription[edit | edit source]

A transcript of this talk is below:

I’m Jenny and I’m going to talk to you about my science fashion project or I call it my science fashion story, and I’m a reader of sensory fantasy fashion at St. Martins and I wasn tto talk to you about biofeedback scent interventions, so it’s really introducing scent to wearable technology.

I’ve just finished the Winston Churchill Travel Fellowship which was a project very much donated to myself for a personal crusade to design behavior change to benefit me with many hat’s on as an entrepreneur, as a designer because I have bipolar. I’ve had bipolar for about 20 years and while the projects been informed with living with bipolar because sometimes I become mute. I lose a lot of confidence which is ironic really because obviously fashion is a lot about self-expression. And what drive me are really my three children and my husband. He also has bipolar and I’m bipolar to, so we’re trying to find a way to reduce the triggers, improve sleep, and reduce stress. So the project is called sensory fashion and it’s building stress management using scent, using wearable technology to breakdown many issues that I have with anxiety and sleep and to induce positive states and to reduce the risk of a bipolar relapse. So for example, these are mood swings and if I can keep within the green central line then there is less likely of having a relapse if I can reduce stress and help sleep, so I call it keeping green and prevent the triggers. And so smell, smell is a very personal thing but it’s also very direct to the limbic system what’s on the top of your nose. And so you cannot turn it off and it’s actually very powerful and very evocative and so I’m using this as an immediate goal is to build a customized scent bubble with this technology which is very near the nose to find a calming method to reduce stress, performance, anxiety, sweat when I get sort of stressed. And I’m inspired by science fiction, and I want to quickly put this in. Aldous Huxley and his new world scent organ and creating this sort of scent magical reality in a can by Philip Caddick if you know the story. And a lot of it is inspired by Terry Mooglers fashion, he said fashion will change dramatically in the coming years. It will be more human, closer to the needs of the people in terms of their well-being and not in terms of them not showing and that was 30 years ago. So what I am doing. I am building these tools, and it’s an experimental project and I’m creating the convergence of ancient perfumery with emerging technologies. So you’ve got wearable tech, the miniaturization of lab on a chip, micro-fluid, and smell. Smell communication. So if you look at the history, the Egyptians used to wear scent waxes on their head, and the French introduced alcohol to perfume. And what I’m doing is completely getting rid of all that and creating a sort of microchip ultimately, it’s sort of an e-scent microchip, which is controlled scent on a chip. And it’s focusing on aromachology, which is the science of fragrance, it’s not aromatherapy. This is where the data is on aromachology, which is the story of aroma and how it has an effect on human psychology and behavior. There is only really a handful of scents that there is evidence to show this. So these are some of my earlier projects; Smart second skin, which were installations and various sorts of scent, exhibitions and prototypes that I used without technology. This is actually without the wearable technology. These are some working prototypes with biosensors – they weren’t biofeedback, but they were devices that released scent in response to a stimulus on various wearable devices that create these personalized scent bubble right near the nose. So the real time biofeedback scent interventions that I’m leaning towards, the idea is that you can track mood and sleep, and then the escent device will release counteracting scents to relieve tension when stress levels get to a certain threshold. Then you need to know which scent and how you’re feeling obviously. So I have worked with Philips, this is one of my partners and this was a Fellowship where we were looking at various different ideas for their sleep and stress businesses and putting into their mood therapy lamps and wake-up lamps. And this is the idea of having a sort of pending that releases scent to help you sleep and lavender would be the most obvious one, because there is evidence to show that can help with relaxation. And this was with Cardiff University, because they are actually on the doorstep to a lot of these aromas. Then it will have something to wake you up in the morning and you could have a pendant and perhaps sitting on the pillow and that will be releasing a citrus scent to stimulate and energize you, and peppermint to keep you awake throughout the day. So what did I learn? Well, the Fellowship was really a way to raise mental health awareness, and teaching me how to read communicate, because I think that was a lot of the problem with the bipolar and depression. I lost a lot of confidence, and I’ve been able to start a lot of new fashion and communication projects; many of what I am commercializing. And I was also able to experiment with many of these oils that kind of help reduce stress, help me sleep, and sort of help with the yoga and just generally take care of myself. So this is the scents that I’ll be using with the new delivery systems, as I develop. So with the Fellowship, I was able to take and travel around and meet various Californian psychiatrists and these are some of the comments that it’s really going to help with the prodrome intervention before you have the little shifts that gets to the bigger shifts. And as a kind of warning system, so you can release the scent to build your own therapeutic rainbow depending how you are feeling. So it’s a very personalized system, and obviously it’s not for everyone. You need to know which scents would potentially work if you’re feeling angry. But it’s also creating this scent clock as well and you can have this built into your watch, or clothing or whatever it might be, and releasing it in the morning for example, and something at night-time. So it’s very much in tuned with your own body, so I call that the smart second skin and it’s tailored to move. What I’m learning as well is that with the scent bubble, releasing the scent there is actually some science behind this, depending on the odor threshold of how much scent is released from the perfume you know, top base and middle note, so that’s kind of interesting project as that developed. So only a very small amount is release, and depending on the actual aroma that this does actually work. So my long-term goal is to use electronic note sensors and that would be the ideal, to embed these into your clothing and that would detect stress related body odor which is the very fatty odors when we are very very stressed, and to create the scent bubble. And what I hope to do then is test and measure the actual earwax, which has body odor, and to find out if there are stress levels in there. There is certainly with blue whales, they know that when they are stressed there is a lot of stress related body odor in their canal. So this just shows how will develop with these tracking obviously, which I haven’t started and I will do when I have got the scent delivery system, but tracking smell is the key thing and the actual stress related body odor and then how that works with the scent bubble as you are monitoring your mood. So there is many many many other applications for this sort of technology, for memory recall and dementia. As a CBT cyber tool for behaviour change obviously, and then for curbing appetite and enhancing appetite which would work with QS diagnosing disease.

And really, that’s it; there you are with the rainbow and the scent bubble. Thank you very much.

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