TY - BOOK AU - McStay,Andrew TI - Automating empathy: decoding technologies that gauge intimate life SN - 9780197615546 AV - BF575 .E55 M398 2024 PY - 2024///] CY - New York, NY PB - Oxford University Press KW - Empathy N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 259-286) and index; Chapter 1: Automating Empathy -- SECTION I: THEORY AND ETHICS -- Chapter 2: Hyperreal Emotion -- Chapter 3: Assessing the Physiognomic Critique -- Chapter 4: Hybrid Ethics -- Chapter 5: The Context Imperative: Extractivism, Japan, and Holism -- SECTION II: APPLICATIONS AND IMPLICATIONS -- Chapter 6: Positive Education -- Chapter 7: Automating Vulnerability: Sensing Interiors -- Chapter 8: Hybrid Work: Automated for the People? -- Chapter 9: Waveforms of Human Intention: Towards Everyday Neurophenomenology -- Chapter 10: Selling Emotions: Moral Limits of Intimate Data Markets -- Chapter 11: Uncertainty for Good: Inverting Automated Empathy -- References N2 - "Automating Empathy assesses technologies used to gauge how people are feeling. The book begins by historically situating the belief that by reading the body and its expressions one might 'feel-into' another. Problematic, the book progresses to highlight the role of ethics. Automating Empathy advances a 'hybrid' approach to questions of technology and ethics, which starts from a position of people being entangled in new technologies. The book is pluralistic, attending to philosophies well-equipped to deal with questions of what is collectively good for society in relation to technologies that interact with intimate dimensions of human life. With early chapters introducing recurrent arguments and positions, the second part of the book addresses technologies and organisational uses. These include: education and uses of automated empathy in classrooms and online settings; cars and transport where cameras and other sensors gauge states such as fatigue, anger and other emotions, and where cars themselves are design to feel; usage in the workplace, including assessment of bodies and voices in physical sites of work and online settings, and gauging of emotion through proxies in gig work settings; development of brain-computer interfaces that have scope to impact on multiple aspects of everyday life; and finally renewed interest in enabling people to sell data about themselves. The book concludes automated empathy, and its deployment, needs to be inverted if systems are to function ethically"-- ER -