Another interesting person I met at #healthfoo:
Kendra Markle hangs out at Stanford and does work on emotional automation, asking the question,"How can technology represent and convey compassion to augment the doctor-patient relationship?"  It turns out that having a compassionate listener, even a computerized one, can help people improve adherence with medical treatment regimes.
An example is Carmen, an computerized person developed by Tim Bickmore at  Northeastern University, which has dialogues with elderly patients and  others that "build    and maintain long-term, social-emotional relationships."
Kendra notes:
As an entrepreneur and founder/CEO of AlterActions, I  build persuasive technology tools for healthy behavior change. My tools  use the latest research findings in psychology and neuroscience combined  with persuasive, mobile and social technology to coach people through a  series of achievable behavior changes. My techniques produce lasting  changes in lifestyle in people struggling with obesity, anxiety, chronic  conditions and emotional health issues. 
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