Monthly Archives: September 2014

Sunnie – Quick Indie Project

As “sick customers” and “holding doors” cause the most train delay, I want to solve the problem from understanding the reason behind people’s behavior and design a public interface to pre-inform people before they hop on the subway. The aspects I took are from the previous project “Urban Fiction” – using data to understand behavior and solve problems, and the data is reference from the MTA Workshop. Also, interaction/information design to improve service efficiency and behavioral change is a potential direction of my thesis project.

My Quick Indie Project link is here.

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Nga Quick Indie Project

Making sense with no-scent for NYC subway for a more pleasant ride. 

indigoProject_Assignment1

The Concept:

Reconceptualization of a collab mid-term Physical Computing project – Kanari, a wearable that detects pollution in context of the NYC subway system. Adapting sensor technology within subway platforms and subway cars to sense odor in the immediate space to sense and callibrate a neutral air state for a more pleasant mass transit commute.

 References:

Original Project:

Kanari Project from SVA Physical Computing taught by Eric Forman, a mid-term project in collaboration with Amy Wu.

http://www.nganycdesign.com/#/kanari-wearable-tech/

Articles:

http://secondavenuesagas.com/2008/08/11/what’s-that-smell-or-an-olfactory-primer-on-new-york’s-subway-system/
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/07/nyregion/odors-on-path-trains-tease-the-senses.html
http://www.bustle.com/articles/31869-how-new-york-city-smells-in-the-summer-the-good-the-bad-and-the-stanky
http://elitedaily.com/humor/25-people-encounter-nyc-subways/
http://nypost.com/2014/03/20/straphangers-group-claims-only-42-of-subway-cars-are-clean/
http://nypost.com/2013/05/12/if-you-see-something-gross-snap-something-gross-straphangers-chronicle-subway-schlubs/
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/08/08/complaints-about-hot-platforms-as-old-as-the-subway/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0
http://aldianews.com/articles/local/philadelphia/what-does-subway-smell-today/2518

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Dami: Quick Indie Project

A link to my quick indie project:

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/do3lul4n0y29bii/AADLNI6I556gOJ44iiZgUVnYa?dl=0

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A window with a view.

A project using  live screens to give riders a delightful sense of place.

 

https://www.dropbox.com/s/7yqm3375jww15v3/Brigante_QIP.pdf?dl=0

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Sneha Pai – Above ground to underground

A link to my quick indie project:

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/801mdktc58qd300/AAD5XXltDP7MFmlRa7rCGrdVa?dl=0

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Effy on “Quick Indie Project”

This is the link to my presentation:

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/jm69twm04njufxn/AABj_1d7xo78Z6Pnp1fIbtNma?dl=0

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The air quality of NYC Subway workers

Supposedly, the air quality in subway stations are safe for commuters, but what about the long-time experienced, 8-hour NYC subway workers?

A study found that subway air had levels of air-borne metals 100 times higher than above ground. It was lowest in subway cars, where dust gets trapped by air-conditioning filters, and highest in stations, where trains brake as they reach the platform. However, the possible health effects of prolonged exposure by workers who have close daily contact with subway rails, wheels and equipment have not been explored.

“There’s almost nothing published about subway safety,” said Dr. Gershon, an associate professor at the Joseph A. Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia. “It’s like a missing target.

“I’m not aware of any occupational studies done in this group of workers, which have been carried out over the time period needed to confirm [health effects],” Dr. Frank Kelly, an environmental health professor says.

A $1 million proposal in 2010, to look at medical insurance claims being made by workers of the MTA, according to their job titles and experience to look for patterns in their illnesses was denied by the MTA. Stating they were worried about worker confidentiality with the release of these medical claims data.

Researcher Steven Chillrud did a small study (limited in scope) with only 40 subway workers who were asked to carry a portable, battery-powered pumps in an under-the-arm harness to sample the air, previously a big air-pump backpack were used in air quality studies like this one. Stationary filters and particle counters also were placed at various locations in the subway system. The workers also were asked to answer questions about their health and work activities. He did not test on women subway workers or for long-term effects of low exposure to these metals.

Enter the Kanari.

Kanari was a collaborative effort between my fellow classmate Nga and I. We made the wearable air quality device in Fundamentals of Physical Computing. Kanari is a light-weight device that alerts its user of the level of air pollution (cigarette smoke, exhaust fumes, etc.) being emitted in the environment around them. With three ranges, in “normal” air quality condition the color lights blue, at mid-range pollutants in the air the device lights red, and at high air pollution levels the device lights red and the alarm beeps to alert the user.

By putting the Kanari project into the NYC subway system, it is like a full circle, from a real “canary in a coal mine” to a more modern version for subway workers. My presentation can be found here.

 

Coal mine worker to NYC subway worker

Coal mine to underground NYC subway system

Coal mine to underground NYC subway system

 

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MTA Subway X Citi Bike (Mike Chen)

Link to my presentation file. 

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Train Tracks

Train Tracks is a generative audio and light display for the MTA. It translates train speed into an ambient light and audio show that can be customized by line, station, time of day, or other relevant parameters. The goal of Train Tracks is to create a more beautiful, whimsical commuting experience for the millions of MTA riders who ride the subway each day, while simultaneously reinforcing the shared identity of specific train lines, stations, or entire neighborhoods.

Presentation can be found here: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/8a59p8c9m028vep/AACVDESERtmoLG_wfUsqnUYBa?dl=0

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Visualizing Subway Train States

Last semester, I worked with Sunnie Sang on an energy tracking app for household appliances called Zooly. We personified home appliances as living, breathing pets in a menagerie that can be healthy, sick, a vampire, or a ghost.

MTA subway trains go through many states as well and what if we could similarly visualize them for users in a more delightful way? Not only does this lend more of a fun and emotional quality to what is often seen as an unpleasant and cold experience, but it can also provide glance-able information in the MTA mobile app or subway interactive screens to on-the-go users.

Here’s the link to the presentation: https://www.dropbox.com/s/8hnz1nd2a67c0y9/Zooly_MTA.pdf?dl=0

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