BIPM150 Poster Session: Exploring Perceptual Metrology for the Future of Well-Being
As society becomes increasingly digitized and sensor-driven, the ways we perceive and quantify experiences like comfort, sound, or flavour are gaining scientific importance.
At the BIPM’s Scientific Symposium held during the 150th Anniversary of the Metre Convention, Mr Cristhian Paredes from Colombia’s Instituto Nacional de Metrología (INM) presented his poster, “Perceptual Metrology: A Future Frontier in Human Well-Being.”
His poster explores how metrology could evolve to include the quantification of sensory and perceptual experiences, alongside traditional physical measurements.
Mr Paredes Cardona explained that perceptual metrics — such as how sound is heard, how light is experienced, or how food tastes — are becoming increasingly relevant in high-tech industries, quality-of-life assessments and digital technologies.
“Metrology today is not only for the technical aspects. It is also for society and well-being,” — Mr Paredes emphasised.
While still in the early stages of development, perceptual metrology could pave the way for more inclusive and responsive systems in healthcare, workplace safety, consumer products and digital interaction. Mr Paredes’s poster explores potential pathways to building consensus on what it means to measure perception and how such measurements could be standardized.
The Poster
Listen to a 2-minute audio recording of Mr Paredes explaining his poster, here.
Watch the Presentation
As perceptual metrology develops, shared approaches to measuring human experience—accurately, transparently and comparably—can help align innovation with well-being.
BIPM150: Nine Standout Scientific Posters
Chosen from nearly 400 submissions received from around the world, these standout posters address some of the most pressing challenges in modern metrology—from quantum technologies and digital transformation to health, education and sustainability.
Each of these 9 posters was selected by the BIPM Poster Committee from one of nine key topic areas, reflecting the breadth and innovation driving the global metrology community. Learn more.