Frameworks for a New Field: Quantified Self Public Health
“It’s happening. The incredible inventiveness, the incredible caring that individuals have to make the world better, whether they have permission or not: that is the force that is being unleashed.” — Larry Smarr
Our co-convener Larry Smarr, current director of Calit2, previously the founding director of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, where the web browser was born, offers a brief assessment of what’s happening today at the beginning our new field. He points out that he has been through a few of these transformations and asks: what are the changes we need to make in our scientific institutions to allow it to flourish? In his talk, Larry acknowledges the wonderful news that one of the pioneers of using technologies of self-observation in health, Patty Brennan, has recently been appointed the director of the National Library of Medicine. And he raises the fundamental question of who owns the rights to the data our bodies can generate.
Highlights from Quantified Self Public Health 2016
Introduction to Quantified Self Public Health Symposium 2016
Announcing N-of-1: The Journal of the Quantified Self
Let’s Make Active Self-Tracking Much Easier With A One Touch Device
How I Use Self-Collected Data to Change the Power Dynamic in My Clinical Practice
At the Other End of Your Screen for Depression is a Real Person… Who May Suffer from Depression
We’re Not Waiting for Our Automatic Pancreas System
Frameworks for a New Field: Quantified Self Public Health
Learning About Collaboration in Community Science From from Youth Leaders in the Klamath Basin
We’re Trying to Improve Pacific Islander Health — So Why Work with Academics?