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November 2024
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Brainiattic: Remember more with your own Metaverse enhanced brain attic

Connecting devices and human cognition

I recently described the idea of “activity context” and suggested that providing this new type of information about data (meta-data) to applications would permit improve important tasks such as finding. My examining committee challenged me to think about what I would do if my proposed service – Indaleko – already existed today.

This is the second idea that I decided to propose on my blog. My goal is to find how activity context can be used to provide enhanced functionality. My first idea was fairly mundane: how can we improve the “file browsing” experience in a fashion that focuses on content and similarity by combining prior work with the additional insight provided by activity context.

My initial motivation for this second idea was motivated by my mental image of a personal library but I note that there’s a more general model here: displaying digital objects as something familiar. When I recently described this library instantiation of my brain attic the person said “but I don’t think of digital objects as being big enough to be books.” To address this point: I agree, another person’s mental model for how they want to represent digital data in a virtual world need not match my model. That’s one of the benefits of virtual worlds – we can represent things in forms that are not constrained by what things must be in the real world.

In my recent post about file browsers I discussed Focus, an alternative “table top” browser for making data accessible. One reason I liked Focus is that the authors observed how hierarchical organization does not work in this interface. They also show how the interface is useful and thus it is a concrete argument as to at least one limitation of the hierarchical file/folder browser model. Another important aspect of the Focus work was their observation that a benefit of the table top interface is it permits different users to organize information in their own way. A benefit of a virtual “library” is that the same data can be presented to different users in ways that are comfortable to them.

Of course, the “Metaverse” is still an emerging set of ideas. In a recent article about Second Life Philip Rosedale points out that existing advertising driven models don’t work well. This begs the question – what does work well?

My idea is that by having a richer set of environmental information available, it will be easier to construct virtual models that we can use to find information. Vannevar Bush had Memex, his extended memory tool. This idea turns out to be surprisingly ancient in origin, from a time before printing when most information was remembered. I was discussing this with a fellow researcher and he suggested this is like Sherlock Holmes’ Mind Palace. This led me to the model of a “brain attic” and I realized that this is similar to my model of a “personal virtual library.”

The Sherlock Holmes article has a brilliant quotation from Maria Konnikova: “The key insight from the brain attic is that you’re only going to be able to remember something, and you can only really say you know it, if you can access it when you need it,”

This resonates with my goal of improving finding, because improving finding improves access when you need it.

Thus, I decided to call this mental model “Braniattic.” It is certainly more general than my original mental model of a “personal virtual library,” yet I am also permitted to have my mental model of my pertinent digital objects being projected as books. I could then ask my personal digital librarian to show me works related to specific musical bands, or particular weather. As our virtual worlds become more capable – more like the holodeck of Star Trek – I can envision having control of the ambient room temperature and even the production of familiar smells. While our smart thermostats are now capturing the ambient room temperature and humidity level and we can query online sources for external temperatures, we don’t actively use that information to inform our finding activities, despite the reality is that human brains do recall such things; “it was cold out,” “I was listening to Beethovan,” or “I was sick that day.”

Thus, having additional contextual information can be used at least to improve finding by enabling your “brain attic.” I suspect that, once activity context is available we will find additional ways to use it in constructing some of our personal metaverse environments.