References
- Abbate, E. 2020. Here’s how the NBA’s coronavirus-fighting ring might help. GQ, 17 June. Available from: https://www.gq.com/story/oura-ring-nba [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Ajjawi, R. and Eva, K.W., 2021. The problem with solutions. Medical education, 55, 2–3.
- Andrejevic, M., 2019. Automated media. New York: Routledge.
- Anon, 2020. WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute says it can predict COVID-19 related symptoms up to three days in advance. The Intelligencer: Wheeling News-Register, 28 May. Available from: https://www.theintelligencer.net/news/top-headlines/2020/05/wvu-rockefeller-neuroscience-institute-says-it-can-predict-covid-19-related-symptoms-up-to-three-days-in-advance/ [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Balsamo, A., 2011. Designing culture: the technological imagination at work. Durham: Duke University Press.
- Binde, J., 2000. Toward an ethics of the future. Public culture, 12 (1), 51–72.
- Brayne, S., 2020. Predict and surveil: data, discretion, and the future of policing. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Castoriadis, C., 1991. Philosophy, politics, autonomy. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Chariana, S., 2020. Inside the NBA Bubble: Details from NBPA memo obtained by The Athletic. The Athletic, 16 June. Available from: https://theathletic.com/1876737/2020/06/16/inside-the-nba-bubble-details-from-nbpa-memo-obtained-by-the-athletic/ [accessed 5 July 2020].
- Cohn, J., 2019. The burden of choice: recommendations, subversion, and algorithmic culture. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.
- Etherington, D., 2020. Researchers use biometrics, including data from the Oura Ring, to predict COVID-19 symptoms in advance. Tech Crunch, 28 May. Available from: https://techcrunch.com/2020/05/28/researchers-use-biometrics-including-data-from-the-oura-ring-to-predict-covid-19-symptoms-in-advance/ [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Eubanks, V., 2018. Automating inequality: how high-tech tools profile, police, and punish the poor. New York: St. Martin’s Press.
- Fisher, C., 2020. Researchers say Oura rings can predict COVID-19 symptoms three days early. Engadget, 1 June. Available from: https://www.engadget.com/west-virginia-university-oura-ring-covid-19-symptoms-003239603.html [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Fowler, G.A., 2020. Wearable tech can spot coronavirus symptoms before you even realize you’re sick. The Washington Post, 28 May. Available from: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2020/05/28/wearable-coronavirus-detect/ [accessed 5 July 2020].
- Fussell, S., 2020. An algorithm that ‘predicts’ criminality based on a face sparks a furor. Wired, 24 June. Available from: https://www.wired.com/story/algorithm-predicts-criminality-based-face-sparks-furor/ [accessed 6 July, 2020].
- Gilmore, J.N., 2016. Everywear: wearable fitness technologies and the quantified self. New media & society, 18 (11), 2524–2539.
- Gilmore, J.N., 2017. From ticks and tocks to budges and nudges: The smartwatch and the haptics of informatic culture. Television & new media, 18 (3), 189–202.
- Gilmore, J.N., 2019. Design for everyone: Apple AirPods and the mediation of accessibility. Critical studies in media communication, 36 (5), 482–494.
- Gilmore, J.N., 2020. Securing the kids: geofencing and child wearables. Convergence: the international journal of research into new media technologies, 26, 1333–1346. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354856519882317
- Giroux, H.A., 2002. The politics of emergency time versus public time: Terrorism and the culture of fear. Culture Machine. https://culturemachine.net/interzone/the-politics-of-emergency-versus-public-time-giroux/ [accessed 30 December 2020].
- Goode, L., 2020. Can a wearable detect Covid-19 before symptoms appear? Wired, 14 April. Available from: https://www.wired.com/story/wearable-covid-19-symptoms-research/ [accessed 5 July, 2020].
- Grossberg, L., 2018a. Tilting at windmills: a cycnical assemblage of the crises of knowledge. Cultural studies, 32 (2), 149–193.
- Grossberg, L., 2018b. Under the cover of chaos: Trump and the battle for the American right. London: Pluto Press.
- Mackenzie, A., 2015. The production of prediction: what does machine learning want? European journal of cultural studies, 18(4-5), 429–445.
- Mak, A., 2020. What the NBA’s $300 COVID-detecting rings can actually accomplish. Slate, 22 June. Available from: https://slate.com/technology/2020/06/nba-coronavirus-oura-ring-orlando.html [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Markham, A., 2021. The limits of the imaginary: challenges to intervening in future speculations of memory, data, and algorithms. New media & society, 23, 382–405. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444820929322
- Maxmen, A. and Tollefson, J., 2020. Two decades of pandemic war games failed to account for Donald Trump. Nature, 584, 26–29.
- Mayer-Schönberger, V. and Cukier, K., 2014. Big data: A revolution that will transform how we live, work, and think. London: John Murray.
- Milan, S., 2020. Techno-solutionism and the standard human in the making of the COVID-19 pandemic. Big Data & Society, July-December, 1–7.
- Morozov, E., 2013. To save everything, click here: The folly of technological solutionism. New York: Public Affairs.
- Neff, G. and Nafus, D., 2016. Self-tracking. Cambridge: The MIT Press.
- Oura, 2018. Terms of use. Oura Ring. Available from: https://ouraring.com/terms-and-conditions [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Oura, 2020a. Readiness: Your complete guide. Oura Ring. Available from: https://ouraring.com/readiness-score [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Oura, 2020b. The Oura difference. Oura Ring. Available from: https://ouraring.com/the-oura-difference [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Packer, J., 2020. How to destroy a government. The Atlantic, April. Available from: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2020/04/how-to-destroy-a-government/606793/ [accessed 30 December 2020].
- Peters, J.D., 2017. ‘You mean my whole fallacy is wrong’: On technological determinism. Representations, 140, 10–26.
- Pickman, B., 2020. The story behind the Ring that is key to the NBA’s restart. Sports Illustrated, 1 July. Available from: https://www.si.com/nba/2020/07/01/oura-ring-nba-restart-orlando-coronavirus [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Previte, S., 2020. NBA to use ‘smart rings,’ big data to fight coronavirus in Disney bubble. New York Post, 19 June. Retrieved from: https://nypost.com/2020/06/19/nba-to-use-smart-rings-to-detect-coronavirus-within-bubble/ [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Reichert, C., 2020. NBA players could wear smart ring to track COVID-19 symptoms as season resumes. CNet, 22 June. Retrieved from: https://www.cnet.com/news/nba-players-could-wear-a-smart-ring-to-track-covid-19-symptoms-as-season-resumes-at-disney-world/ [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute, 2020. Understanding the spread; protecting our health and economy. WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute. Available from: https://wvumedicine.org/RNI/COVID19/ [accessed 6 July 2020].
- Schneider, E.C., 2020. Failing the test—the tragic data gap undermining the U.S. pandemic response. New England journal of medicine, 383, 299–302.
- Shear, M.D., et al., 2020. The lost month: how a failure to test blinded the U.S. to Covid-19. The New York Times, 28 March. Available from: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/28/us/testing-coronavirus-pandemic.html [accessed 8 July 2020].
- Slack, J.D. and Wise, J.M., 2015. Culture and technology: a primer. 2nd ed. New York: Peter Lang.
- Smarr, B.L., et al. 2020. Feasibility of continuous fever monitoring using wearable devices. Scientific reports, 10. article number 21640.
- Taylor, C., 2004. Modern social imaginaries. Durham: Duke University Press.
- Vaidhyanathan, S., 2011. The googlization of everything (and why we should worry). Berkeley: University of California Press.
- WVU Medicine, 2020. WVU Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute announces capabilities to predict COVID-19 related symptoms up to three days in advance. WVU Medicine. Available from: https://wvumedicine.org/news/article/wvu-rockefeller-neuroscience-institute-announces-capability-to-predict-covid-19-related-symptoms-up-/ [accessed 6 July 2020].