Sensor Calibration
The problem is often couched as one of recognition 
The difficulty, as it were, of sensor calibration 
For if you can't measure a signal as a matter of first principle 
If you can't detect accurately, you might as well be invisible
The auto-focus systems in cameras that can't detect those darker than blue
The pulse oximeters giving false hope - the all clear, to those with a darker hue
Training data, darker skin tones - unusual, light exposure
Biometrics, facial recognition, fingerprint sensors 
Architectures of participation and control 
Resigned to playing the tenuous outsider role
In this rigged game of life (and death) with ever changing rules 
Arbitrary boundaries, when lines are drawn, borders can be cruel
For those excluded from the system, then, a matter of quiet advocacy 
A liberation struggle of sorts, forever teaching others how to see 
File under the banner of cultural sensitivity in technology 
Sensor calibration and relief from the burden of invisibility
 
Sensor Calibration, a playlist
A soundtrack for this note, fodder for sensitive souls (spotify version)
- Sensitivity by Ralph Tresvant
 - You Can't Miss What You Can't Measure by Clarence Carter
 - My Sensitivity (Gets in the Way) by Luther Vandross
 - You Can't Miss What You Can't Measure by Funkadelic
 - We People Who are Darker than Blue by Curtis Mayfield
 - Skin I'm In by Cameo
 - Choice of Colors by The Impressions
 
See previously Cultural Sensitivity in Technology and Empire State of Mind
File under: technology, culture, observation, perception, history, race, localization, photography, health, design, software, hardware, sensors, best practices, exclusion, participation, poetry, Observers are worried, toli
Writing log: September 21, 2022

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