Ryan J. Ward

Ryan J. Ward
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Ryan verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
Verified
Ryan verified their affiliation via an institutional email.
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • Senior Lecturer at Liverpool John Moores University

About

19
Publications
3,358
Reads
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120
Citations
Introduction
Ryan J. Ward is currently at Liverpool John Moore University in the School of Computer Science & Mathematics. Research interests are olfaction both human and machine, human-computer interaction, crossmodal correspondences, virtual/augmented reality, machine learning, and electronic noses.
Current institution
Liverpool John Moores University
Current position
  • Senior Lecturer
Additional affiliations
May 2023 - May 2026
University of Liverpool
Position
  • Honary Senior Fellow
Education
October 2018 - August 2022
University of Liverpool
Field of study
  • Cognitive Psychology and Electrical Engineering & Electronics
September 2015 - July 2018
Bangor University
Field of study
  • Computer Science

Publications

Publications (19)
Article
Full-text available
The phenomenology of synaesthesia provides numerous cognitive benefits, which could be used towards augmenting interactive experiences with more refined multisensorial capabilities leading to more engaging and enriched experiences, better designs, and more transparent human-machine interfaces. In this study, we report a novel framework for the tran...
Article
Full-text available
Influenza is an acute viral respiratory disease that is currently causing severe financial and resource strains worldwide. With the COVID-19 pandemic exceeding 153 million cases worldwide, there is a need for a low-cost and contactless surveillance system to detect symptomatic individuals. The objective of this study was to develop FluNet, a novel,...
Article
Full-text available
When designing multisensorial experiences, robustly predicting the crossmodal perception of olfactory stimuli is a critical factor. We investigate the possibility of predicting olfactory crossmodal correspondences using the underlying physicochemical features. An electronic nose was tuned to the crossmodal perceptual axis of olfaction and was used...
Article
Full-text available
During the olfactory perception process, our olfactory receptors are thought to recognize specific chemical features. These features may contribute towards explaining our crossmodal perception. The physicochemical features of odors can be extracted using an array of gas sensors, also known as an electronic nose. The present study investigates the r...
Article
Full-text available
Our brain constantly combines multisensory information from our surrounding environment. Odors for instance are often perceived with visual cues; these sensations interact to form our own subjective experience. This integration process can have a profound impact on the resulting experience and can alter our subjective reality. Crossmodal correspond...
Article
The integration of information from different sensory modalities is a fundamental process that enhances perception and performance in real and virtual environments (VR). Understanding these mechanisms, especially during learning tasks that exploit novel multisensory cue combinations provides opportunities for the development of new rehabilitative i...
Thesis
Full-text available
As technology develops to allow for the integration of additional senses into interactive experiences, there is a need to bridge the divide between the real and the virtual in a manner that stimulates the five senses consistently and in harmony with the sensory expectations of the user. Applying the philosophy of a neurological condition known as s...
Article
Full-text available
Olfaction is ingrained into the fabric of our daily lives and constitutes an integral part of our perceptual reality. Within this reality, there are crossmodal interactions and sensory expectations; understanding how olfaction interacts with other sensory modalities is crucial for augmenting interactive experiences with more advanced multisensorial...
Article
Full-text available
Olfaction is ingrained into the fabric of our daily lives and constitutes an integral part of our perceptual reality. Within this reality, there are crossmodal interactions and sensory expectations; understanding how olfaction interacts with other sensory modalities is crucial for augmenting interactive experiences with more advanced multisensorial...
Preprint
Full-text available
Olfaction is ingrained into the fabric of our daily lives and constitutes an integral part of our perceptual reality. Within this reality, there are crossmodal interactions and sensory expectations; understanding how olfaction interacts with other sensory modalities is crucial for augmenting interactive experiences with more advanced multisensorial...
Article
Full-text available
Olfaction is ingrained into the fabric of our daily lives and constitutes an integral part of our perceptual reality. Within this reality, there are crossmodal interactions and sensory expectations; understanding how olfaction interacts with other sensory modalities is crucial for augmenting interactive experiences with more advanced multisensorial...
Preprint
Full-text available
Influenza, an acute viral respiratory disease that is currently causing severe financial and resource strains worldwide. With the recent COVID-19 pandemic exceeding 153 million cases worldwide, there is a need for a low-cost and contactless surveillance system to detect symptomatic individuals, more so in counties with limited healthcare resources....
Preprint
Full-text available
Influenza, an acute viral respiratory disease that is currently causing severe financial and resource strains worldwide. With the recent COVID-19 pandemic exceeding 153 million cases worldwide, there is a need for a low-cost and contactless surveillance system to detect symptomatic individuals, more so in counties with limited healthcare resources....
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Predicting olfactory perception with an electronic nose can aid in the design and evaluation of olfactory-based experiences. We investigate whether the human perception of odours can be predicted outside the bounds of perceived pleasantness and semantic descriptors. We tuned an electronic nose to predict an odour's colour in the CIELAB colour space...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Predicting olfactory perception with an electronic nose can aid in the design and evaluation of olfactory-based experiences. We investigate whether the human perception of odours can be predicted outside the bounds of perceived pleasantness and semantic descriptors. We tuned an electronic nose to predict an odour's colour in the CIELAB colour space...
Poster
Full-text available
Odour perception occurs when our olfactory receptors transduce volatile molecules. The bindings between our olfactory receptors are believed to recognise specific chemical features (Kermen & Chakirican et al., 2011 Nature Scientific Reports 206 1-6). However, the role the underlying chemical features plays in explaining olfactory crossmodal corresp...
Article
Full-text available
—Mobile HMDs must sacrifice compute performance to achieve ergonomic and power requirements for extended use. Consequently, applications must either reduce rendering and simulation complexity - along with the richness of the experience - or offload complexity to a server. Within the context of edge-computing, a popular way to do this is through ren...
Article
Distributed Virtual Environments (DVEs) are challenging to create as the goals of consistency and responsiveness become contradictory under increasing latency. DVEs have been considered as both distributed transactional databases and force-reflection systems. Both are good approaches, but they do have drawbacks. Transactional systems do not support...
Article
Full-text available
A novel strategy for the direct analysis of non-conjugated steroids in water using paper spray mass spectrometry (PS-MS) has been developed. PS-MS was used in the identification and quantification of non-conjugated (free) steroids in fish tank water samples. Data shown herein indicates that individual amounts of free steroids can be detected in aqu...

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