Interaction - Bachelor

HeartLight booth is an interactive light installation that uses a small pulse sensor to pick up your heartbeat and turn it into light. Each heartbeat travels through the fibre optics, lighting up the space in a rhythm that feels alive and personal. The idea came from noticing how easy it is to feel disconnected in our fast, tech-driven lives — this project slows people down, creating a private, reflective moment to reconnect with themselves.

We’re surrounded by technology that constantly pulls our attention outward — but not much of it helps us turn inward. Many people feel disconnected from their emotions and even from their own bodies. In a world designed for constant engagement, it’s become harder to simply pause, breathe, and feel present. This disconnection can make us feel detached, anxious, and overstimulated — even though we’re surrounded by technology that is meant to connect us.
What if we could see our heartbeat? What if a quiet, invisible rhythm could become something visible, calming, and poetic?
HeartLight explores how interaction design can support emotional awareness — not through screens or numbers, but through light and sensory experience. It’s based on the idea that seeing and feeling your heartbeat in real time can foster mindfulness, interoception (awareness of the body’s internal state), and emotional regulation.
Most biofeedback systems focus on data and performance. There’s little space for emotion, poetry, or personal reflection in those experiences. HeartLight fills that gap by translating biometric data into an intimate, artistic interaction — one that helps people reconnect with their own rhythm.
How might we create an immersive, intimate installation that turns a person’s heartbeat into light and supports emotional awareness?
Ayesha Ahmad
And how might seeing another person’s heartbeat through colour and rhythm shape our own rhythms and emotions?
HeartLight could be used in places designed for reflection and calm such as galleries, wellness spaces, hospitals, or waiting areas — anywhere people might need a quiet moment to pause. It offers a gentle, sensory way to reconnect with yourself through light and rhythm.
It’s a simple concept with flexible use — whether as an interactive artwork, a tool for mindfulness, or part of a therapeutic environment that helps people slow down and breathe.
Public intimacy is achieved by designing from the inside out…
Alexander Royfee
Ayesha Ahmad is completing her Bachelor of Interaction Design at QUT. She enjoys creating experiences that bridge people and technology through thoughtful, user-centred design. Her work focuses on building meaningful interactions that feel human, intuitive, and emotionally engaging.