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Guest Lecture: Nadia Berthouze (UCL) "Sensing Bodies to Support Care: Affective Computing for Health and Wellbeing"

Professor Nadia Berthouze from UCL is visiting Helsink for a lecture and meet and greet. Nadia is a pioneer in Affective Computing.

Prof Nadia Berthouze (UCL), a pioneer in Affective Computing, will provide the lecture "Sensing Bodies to Support Care: Affective Computing for Health and Wellbeing" on 10.12.2025 from 15:00-16:00. It will be live in Exactum A111, Pietari Kalmin katu 5, Kumpula and streamed to Aalto, T5 in the Computer house, Konemiehentie 2, Espoo

Title: Sensing Bodies to Support Care: Affective Computing for Health and Wellbeing

 Abstract:  Affective computing and body-sensing technologies are opening new possibilities to enhance wellbeing and transform healthcare. By analysing and modelling human movement and touch behaviour, we can not only gain insights and modulate affective interaction, but also design technologies that actively support health and wellbeing management. To be effective, such affective technologies must be grounded in an understanding of how affect is expressed and engaged within everyday functioning. In this talk, I will share lessons from three case studies. First, I will discuss our work on chronic pain self-directed rehabilitation, showing how sensing body movement can support people with chronic pain in remaining active and how body movement itself could be leveraged to increase awareness or alter people's perceptions of themselves. Second, I will present work with occupational therapists, where we explored how robotics can be used for touch assessment training and skill development, supporting therapists in their embodied, hands-on practice. Finally, I will show very preliminary work on how affective body-sensing technologies could provide support beyond healthcare into everyday wellbeing and sustainable fashion choices.

Bio: Nadia Berthouze is a Full Professor in Affective Computing and Interaction at the University College London Interaction Centre (UCLIC). She is the Deputy Director of UCLIC. Her research focuses on designing technology that can sense the affective state of its users and use that information to tailor the interaction process. She has pioneered the field of Affective Computing by investigating how body movement and touch behaviour can be used as means to recognize and measure the quality of the user experience. She also studied how full-body technology and body sensory feedback can be used to modulate people’s perception of themselves and of their capabilities to improve self-efficacy and coping capabilities. Her work has been motivated by real-world applications such as physical rehabilitation (EPSR Embodied Intelligence, EPSRC Emo&Pain, H2020 EnTiMeMent), technology for textile design (EPSRC Digital Sensoria, EPSRC Textile Circularity Centre), education (H2020 WeDraw) and wellbeing (Intelligent Embodied Interaction, EPSRC; H2020 Human Manufacturing, EPSRC Embodied Intelligence). She has published more than 200 papers in Affective Computing, HCI, and Pattern Recognition.

Nadia will also be in Otaniemi on 11th Dec from 10:00 to 15:00 to visit Aalto in 3442 Dice-6 in Kide building (Konemiehentie 1) 

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The department of Information and Communications Engineering has a strong focus in the ICT area varying from ICT technology to core electrical engineering and its basic phenomena.

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