# EmotionNet: The Wi-Fi of Human Connection

Quick stat: The global affective computing market is projected to reach $65 billion by 2030. EmotionNet asks: what if we built an infrastructure for sharing feelings, not just data?

EmotionNet: The Wi-Fi of Human Connection

What if human emotional connection worked like Wi-Fi? Not the metaphorical kind — an actual neural infrastructure that could transmit affective states across networks, much like how your phone broadcasts data through the air.

Recent work in affective neuroscience suggests the seeds of this idea aren't entirely far-fetched. When people have deep conversations, their brain activity synchronizes in real-time. The speaker's brain literally "transmits" patterns that the listener's brain decodes (Hasson et al., 2004, PNAS). Mirror neurons fire both when we act and when we observe others acting, creating a biological basis for empathy (Rizzolatti & Craighero, 2004).

EmotionNet draws from three pillars:

"Social connections are as important to our health as quitting smoking. The more varied your social connections, the better." — Holt-Lunstad, J. (2017), Brookings Institution

https://www.brookings.edu/research/your-social-connections-matter/

Why This Matters

We're building increasingly sophisticated communication technology while emotional literacy stagnates. An EmotionNet wouldn't replace face-to-face connection — it would augment it, giving us the vocabulary and infrastructure to be more intentional about how we share our inner lives.

The real question isn't whether we could build EmotionNet. It's why we haven't built one yet.

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Updated: 2025-04-27