★ 10/19/2015
“Nature is amazing,” but “couldn’t it be more so?” asks science journalist Platoni in this enthusiastic review of research into human senses and ways they might be improved. Platoni converses with scientists who seek to learn how humans perceive the world by examining the nervous system and genes. Her chapters on taste, smell, touch, and emotion are wholly engrossing. Humans, it turns out, are able to taste more than the usual palate of sweet, bitter, salt, sour, and umami; and smell, memory, and culture are almost too integrated to tease apart. Equally surprising is the fact that the brain often treats physical and emotional pain identically. Platoni describes how today’s crude eye and ear implants restore function to those without it; in the future an eye implant might detect infrared or ultraviolet light, and its sensors could be hooked up to distant cameras or a rewind button. Similarly, an artificial ear could be designed to hear much higher frequencies or echo-locate. Platoni also profiles some of the dedicated amateur “biohackers” and the gruesome experiments they’re apt to conduct on themselves. This is a superb account of human perception and the first, clunky but potentially breathtaking efforts to expand it. Agent: Gillian MacKenzie, Gillian MacKenzie Agency. (Dec.)
"[A] fascinating, often mind-boggling report on the fast-growing world of sensory science.... Sometimes glowingly optimistic, and sometimes unnerving, Platoni's overview previews a fast-approaching future of widespread sensory manipulation that demonstrates humankind is truly 'on the cusp of tinkering with its own evolution.'"—Booklist
"Eschewing both the glib hyperbole of techno-futurists and the finger-wagging of neo-Luddites, Platoni takes her notebook on a whistle-stop tour of sensory pioneers: AI developers, VR engineers, pain analysts, flavor enhancers, and even a few people who really are making the world a better place. Her focus on the senses raises smart questions about the pliable boundaries of human perception and the very real limits of technologyat least in primitive 2015."—New York Magazine, 7 Books You Need to Read This December
"The cutting edge takes on literal meaning in We Have the Technology, as Kara Platoni introduces us to the biohackers, surgeons, perfumers, chefs, and patients pushing the boundaries of reality by inserting perception-altering technologies inside their bodies. Deeply reported and deftly told, We Have the Technology draws back the curtain on a brave new world in which being a hacker means hacking oneself."—Joshua Davis, author of Spare Parts: Four Undocumented Teenagers, One Ugly Robot, and the Battle for the American Dream
Washington Post
[We Have the Technology is a] scrupulously researched
thought-provoking book
A whirlwind tour of the senses and the ways technology may or may not enhance them through methods both fantastic and mundane
Platoni is a wonderful explicator of technology who weaves memorable and vivid metaphors to illustrate difficult concepts.”
Bay Area News Group, San Jose Mercury News, Contra Costa Times, and Oakland Tribune
Kara Platoni melds complex concepts of biotech and human sensory enhancement in her new book, We Have the Technology
it shows us just how far modern technology has come and how wild and crazy it's going to get.”
Shelf Awareness for Readers newsletter
[We Have the Technology is] an examination of how the creative world of sensory science is changing our understanding and perceptions of reality.”
Publishers Weekly, starred review
[An] enthusiastic review of research into human senses and ways they might be improved.... [W]holly engrossing.... This is a superb account of human perception and the first, clunky but potentially breathtaking efforts to expand it.”
"Consistently fascinating, witty, and candid.... Engrossing techno-science delivered with gusto and sure to reach a varied audience."—Kirkus
"All readers will find something in this journalistic text that doesn't shy away from tough issues such as privacy and trauma."—Library Journal
"With her rich reporting and narrative writing, Platoni provides readers with an accessible and engaging firsthand account of the inventions that are likely to shape science, technology, and human perception for many years to come."—East Bay Express
"Oakland journalist Platoni explores new research that shows how sensory perception and human experience are unexpectedly complicated and changeable."—Los Angeles Times
"Platoni is a good match for this fascinating, sometimes fraught subject. She's an industrious gatherer of facts and anecdotes. She has a talent for explaining complex ideas in clear language. And in this book, her first, she's crafted a thought-provoking group portrait of the innovative thinkers who, in ways subtle and not so, are reimagining what the brain and the body can do.... She's the antithesis of an armchair reporter."—San Francisco Chronicle
"[We Have the Technology is a] scrupulously researched
thought-provoking book.... A whirlwind tour of the senses and the ways technology may or may not enhance them through methods both fantastic and mundane.... Platoni is a wonderful explicator of technology who weaves memorable and vivid metaphors to illustrate difficult concepts."—Washington Post
"[An] enthusiastic review of research into human senses and ways they might be improved.... [W]holly engrossing.... This is a superb account of human perception and the first, clunky but potentially breathtaking efforts to expand it."—Publishers Weekly, starred review
01/01/2016
The overarching theme of this book is perception: What do we, as humans, perceive and how do we experience more? To explore this, Platoni (journalism, Univ. of California, Berkeley) covers both how senses are applied and the ways in which scientists and enthusiasts are pursuing ways of improving the senses. Mostly, this means assistive technology for people with disabilities. However, Platoni's approach is not the most enlightened when it comes to "fixing people." The initial chapters on the five senses cover the "soft" biohacking of cultural forces such as language and how they shape a perception of reality. The middle chapters on observations of time, pain, and emotion are more nebulous and seem somewhat out of place, except that they discuss the brain. The final section considers using technology to create or extend the sensory environment, which includes wearables such as virtual reality gear but also embedded devices that "hard" biohackers place inside their bodies in an effort to create new senses. VERDICT All readers will find something in this journalistic text that doesn't shy away from tough issues such as privacy and trauma. Fans of Elizabeth Moon's "Vatta's War" series will enjoy learning about the current state of biohacking implants.—Cate Hirschbiel, Iwasaki Lib., Emerson Coll., Boston
2015-09-30
A veteran science reporter examines the many innovative developments of human sensory enhancement. Platoni took a year off from teaching narrative writing and reporting at the University of California to immerse herself in modern bioscience and the aspects of technology-mediated human metaperception. She emerged with notebooks filled with interviews about how to broaden our sensory experiences to "make the world feel real." Consistently fascinating, witty, and candid, Platoni's sensorial tour begins with the scientific and technological tinkering within the realm of the five senses, and then she moves on to aspects of pain and emotion. All of the sensory chapters offer captivating and memorably relevant information including a visit to a Denver lab experimenting on the taste detection of fatty acids and measuring the physiological responses, the research of French olfactory experts analyzing the restorative powers of smell on memory-deficient Alzheimer's patients, revolutionary retinal implants in Los Angeles, and adventures in robotic surgery and prosthetic limbs. One commonality among these food scientists, geneticists, biohackers, entrepreneurs, perfumers, and engineers is the competitive nature and time sensitivity of their quests to discover the next trending flavor combination, sound quality, visual experience, artificial intelligence, or even a "sixth taste." In the second half of the book, the author delves into the development, utilization, and learning experiences shared by augmented reality and metasensory experiences. Segments on time and pain perception are both riveting and worrisome as innovators collaborate to develop a 10,000-year clock, neurobiologists examine time on a cellular level, and impressions of heartsickness and random physical agony are openly shared from a bartender and her patrons at an iconic San Francisco barroom. Platoni's update on virtual-reality gadgetry is no less intriguing. While the author's analyses raise tough questions about the increasing need to subvert and expand reality—are we relentlessly exploratory or just bored?—the ways in which scientists are accomplishing this are utterly spellbinding. Engrossing techno-science delivered with gusto and sure to reach a varied audience.