IDEA:
My illusion is that I am pretty restless even when I am sitting down – I shake me leg constantly and I can never sit still.
PROJECT COMPONENTS:
- Accelerometer transmitting its data via Bluetooth in my pant’s pocket.
- Cell phone running a J2ME applet reading serial data coming in through Bluetooth. Click HERE for the applet. Instructions are HERE – by Dan O’Sullivan.
- Same applet creates a log in the cell phone.
- Once logging is complete, the same applet transmits the log via Bluetooth.
- Java applet on computer that reads serial data and stores it into a file. Click HERE for the applet. Instructions are HERE – by Dan O’Sullivan.
- Another Java applet on computer that reads and parses the data and saves the values into txt files. Click HERE for the code – you will have to change the file paths for your computer.
- C/OpenGL program that draws data in the form of a bubble with the data as input. Click HERE for the code.
I am using the x, y, and z components of the accelerometer to determine the phase shift of the spheres.
I logged my movements during a period of 6 hours.
DATA VISUALIZATION:
The sphere is drawn on a 3D plane and an increasing yellow line on the top shows which portion of the 6 hours of data that you are looking at. Here is the video:
You are seeing the following:
- At home getting ready to leave
- Going down 5 flights of stairs
- On bike going to school
- Going up 4 flights of stairs to ITP
- Sitting in class
- Going down 4 flights of stairs for coffee
- Going up 4 flights of stairs back to class
- Sitting in class
- Going down 4 flights of stairs to leave
- On bike going home
- Up 5 flights of stairs
- END
CONCLUSION:
Even though the data visualization cannot be associated easily with specific movements
you can actually tell that even when I am in class sitting down (mid portion of the data) the sphere keeps wobbling. There are very few periods of stability or no movement confirming my initial thought that I am always moving around and restless.
I also noticed that I am the happiest when I am on the move – well – on my bike more specifically.