Memento: Augmenting Personalized Memory via Practical Multimodal Wearable Sensing in Visual Search and Wayfinding Navigation
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Apr 28, 2025
Abstract
Working memory involves the temporary retention of information over short
periods. It is a critical cognitive function that enables humans to perform
various online processing tasks, such as dialing a phone number, recalling
misplaced items' locations, or navigating through a store. However, inherent
limitations in an individual's capacity to retain information often result in
forgetting important details during such tasks. Although previous research has
successfully utilized wearable and assistive technologies to enhance long-term
memory functions (e.g., episodic memory), their application to supporting
short-term recall in daily activities remains underexplored. To address this
gap, we present Memento, a framework that uses multimodal wearable sensor data
to detect significant changes in cognitive state and provide intelligent in
situ cues to enhance recall. Through two user studies involving 15 and 25
participants in visual search navigation tasks, we demonstrate that
participants receiving visual cues from Memento achieved significantly better
route recall, improving approximately 20-23% compared to free recall.
Furthermore, Memento reduced cognitive load and review time by 46% while also
substantially reducing computation time (3.86 seconds vs. 15.35 seconds),
offering an average of 75% effectiveness compared to computer vision-based cue
selection approaches.