London - The
2014 Saatchi & Saatchi New Directors’ Showcase #feelthereel premiered at
Cannes Lions Festival of Creativity on 19th June, with a live event
that introduced the Showreel of 19 films by 18 New Directors. Saatchi
& Saatchi gave the audience a ‘world first’ experience: wristbands were
handed out to all 2,300 audience members, and each individual wearer’s
emotional response was monitored for the entire time the NDS reel was
projected.
The
data mined from the wristbands was then visualized and projected onto screens
mounted either side of the main screen showing the reel. Whilst the
audience watched the event their emotional reaction was being simultaneously
collected and projected, and the theme of ‘Feel the Reel’ - conceived by
Saatchi & Saatchi creatives Linda Weitgasser & Alex Sattlecker - came
alive. Watch the video here.
The wristband, created by Studio XO for their new XOX Emotional Wearable
Technology Platform, is a silicon band containing electronics that draw
biometric data out of the body by listening to its ebb and flow. The
wristbands measure levels of excitement in the host and an LED light embedded
in the wristband moves through a spectrum of colours, blue, green, orange, red
& magenta (magenta being the highest state of arousal). The change in
colour indicates that the wearer is having an ‘episode’ and a change of
emotions. Information from the individual wristbands was broadcast
wirelessly to a central unit that harnessed all the data received.
Studio
XO mined all the data collected from the individual wristbands in Cannes, and
in their London studio created individual graphs to show how the audience
responded. The graphs give interesting details and facts on the audience’s
behaviour patterns and emotional reaction to the Showreel, which is illustrated
in the graph above and on our Facebook page here.
And
an average of all audience members’ emotional reactions:
- 98%
of Users were stimulated by the work they saw on the NDS reel.
- 83% of Users experienced relatively high
levels of arousal.
- 65% of Users that turned highly aroused at
some point.
Wristband colour ratio:
- Percentage
of time in Green 21.62
- Percentage
in Orange 5.439
- Percentage
in Red 2.219
- Percentage
in Magenta 0.947
Regarding
general behaviour, there is a strong correlation of audience arousal, which
seems to happen consistently at the same time in around a 85% of the audience.
Some videos show a more differentiated effect among reactions, such as Emile
Sornin’s funny ‘Grab Her’ music video for Disclosure, where part of the audience
were getting very agitated and others seemed completely unaffected. Tatia
Pilieva’s erotic short ‘First Kiss’ consistently maintained a medium to high
arousal level, which was shared by most of the audience. Josh Cole’s
promo for Rudimental ‘Not Giving In’ caused an excitement peak about halfway
through the film. Vania Heymann’s humourous ‘Walking Contest’ came during
the down slope in excitement of the previous video, but nevertheless maintained
a strong reaction, although differentiated between the individuals. Ed Morris’s
hard-hitting anti-bullying ad Cybersmile #dontretaliate provoked a strong
reaction throughout the audience. Tariq Abel-Gawad’s visually stimulating
‘Box’ also got a strong initial reaction, which dipped then peaked again at the
end of the video.
Films
featuring sexual references and humour provoked the highest levels of arousal
in the audience; for example Kyra & Constantin’s ‘Rollin’ Wild’ featuring
spherical animals had a good initial reaction, with the leopard and cheetah characters
causing highest level of arousal, although people experienced different levels
of arousals to different animals; Alberto Belli’s titillating ‘It’s Not Porn’
sketch caused high levels of arousal that lowered throughout the film; Alvise
Avati’s witty ‘Beans’ film had a strong effect on the audience, with most of
the wristbands registering a increment in arousal. Donato Sansone’s risqué
‘GrotesquePhotobooth’ provoked one of the most noticeable variations in people,
with around 20% of the audience getting very aroused, and others remaining
calm. But not all of the films that caused high levels of reaction in the
audience’s wristbands were funny or sexy; some were just classy and well
crafted, such as ‘Icons’ for The Sunday Times shot by Us.
The
data collected shows that the idea, the concept and the technology were proven,
and it is possible to capture a human reaction to a film and store it as data.