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Margaret Morris wondered if a smart phone could add a new dimension to fostering mental health. She reveals how subjects successfully interacted with their phones throughout the day, mapping moods, charting physical responses, and getting instant ideas on confronting situations. And rather than expressing concerns about privacy, they wanted to share their emotions with others. Margaret is a clinical psychologist who strives to make technologies that are emotionally helpful. She is a senior research scientist at Intel, where she works closely with engineers and designers to promote emotional connectedness and personal change via social media, mobile phones and embedded sensing. Prior to joining Intel, she was an experience Modeler at Sapient. Margaret received her BA from Haverford College, her PhD from the university of new Mexico, and completed her postdoctoral fellowship from Stanford university. About the TED Institute: We know that innovative ideas and fresh approaches to challenging problems can be discovered inside visionary companies around the world. The TED Institute helps surface and share these insights. Every year, TED works with a group of select brands to identify internal ideators, inventers, connectors, and creators. Drawing on the same rigorous regimen that has prepared speakers for the TED main stage, TED Institute works closely with each partner, overseeing curation and providing intensive one-on-one talk development to sharpen and fine tune ideas. Learn more at http://www.ted.com/ted-institute Follow TED Institute on Twitter @TEDPartners Follow more business thinking worth sharing from TED at roi.ted.com