Toronto Star

Biometric sensors help Hollywood measure audience experience

Wearable technology measures heart-pounding action of The Revenant

- RYAN NAKASHIMA

LOS ANGELES— Ever been told a movie is a heart-pounding thriller that’ll have you on the edge of your seat? Thanks to wearable technology, Hollywood has the tools to prove it.

Twentieth Century Fox says that it used a wearable wristband on more than100 people in test screenings for Oscar-contender The Revenant before it hit theatres in December. It’s unclear if it’s the first studio to obtain this sort of data from audiences, but experts say it’s unlikely to be the last.

By measuring heart rate, skin moisture, movement and audible gasps, Fox found the Leonardo DiCaprio vehicle had 14 heart-pounding moments where it measured significan­t jumps in people’s heart rates. Fifteen scenes evoked fight-or-flight responses, as determined by a range of indicators taken together. The audience was also almost completely motionless for just over half of the 21⁄ 2- hour movie — in other words, says the studio, on the edge of their seats.

George Dewey, Fox’s senior vicepresid­ent of digital, said the data complement­s traditiona­l written surveys and focus groups. One of its advantages, he said, is that it cuts through some of the statistica­l “noise” that results when audience members influence each other after the movie.

“This is a pure way to measure individual audience response,” he said.

Companies like the Innerscope Research unit of measuremen­t and ratings giant Nielsen have been doing such biometric-based audience testing for nearly a decade, said Carl Marci, Nielsen’s chief neuroscien­tist. But Hollywood, he said, has been shy about applying these techniques to movies due to the time and expense involved.

Taking such measuremen­ts has previously involved bringing viewers into the lab one at a time, where they can be monitored by medical-grade equipment that tracks everything from brainwaves to eye movement. The spread of inexpensiv­e wearable sensors, however, is bringing costs down to the point where even movie producers with tight budgets can consider them.

Sensors that are “wearable and smaller and lighter and less expensive” are starting to hit the marketplac­e, Marci said. “This is one example of the wave.”

Lightwave Inc., the technology company Fox hired to run the test, said it opted for the sensor-laden wristband to avoid “whitecoat syndrome” — the elevated blood pressure and heart rate people experience when they know they’re being tested.

“The participan­t feels like they’re just going to a movie,” said Lightwave CEO Rana June.

For now, Fox plans to use the technology for marketing — for instance, to highlight scenes that provoke more of a reaction among women in advertisin­g that targets them. But The Revenant director Alejandro Inarritu also saw the results, Dewey acknowledg­ed. And it’s not hard to imagine such pulse and respirator­y data influencin­g the way directors and editors put together their films, much the way test-audience reactions can lead filmmakers to drop certain scenes, or even to change a movie’s ending entirely.

Dewey, however, played down the likely impact on the moviemakin­g process. “Nothing’s ever going to replace the artistry of filmmaking,”

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