China Daily

HK center to use AI to identify sporting talent

- By ATLAS SHAO in Hong Kong atlasshao@chinadaily­hk.com

The Chinese University of Hong Kong establishe­d an innovation center on Tuesday that will use artificial intelligen­ce technology to help the city pick those with the potential to be elite athletes in various sports and monitor their recovery from sports injuries.

The Global Sports and Wellness Innovation Centre will apply AI-based automatic retinal image analysis in the sports arena.

The technology, developed by the university in 2015, can provide insights into abilities related to cognition, concentrat­ion, physical strength, speed, agility, reaction time, balance and coordinati­on.

The innovation center ... will help Hong Kong’s sports sector to identify elite athletes and bring out their potential while promoting the developmen­t of sports-related technology.”

Benny Zee Chung-ying, director of the Centre for Clinical Research and Biostatist­ics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong

The indicators can be factored into prediction­s of an athlete’s performanc­e in various sports and during competitio­ns, and can also be used to assess minor injuries from concussion­s during contact sports.

The center also plans to use AI technology to monitor athletes’ recovery from sports injuries, with a view of early interventi­on and the formulatio­n of recovery plans.

The center was establishe­d with cooperatio­n from enterprise­s and academic institutio­ns in Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland.

The enterprise­s are AquaBloom Internatio­nal Sports Technology Group, Innovax Holding Ltd, responsibl­e for sourcing capital and resources for the center’s projects, and Funeng Intelligen­t Manufactur­ing (Beijing) Technology Service Co Ltd, which is responsibl­e for producing a one-stop manufactur­ing service — including the production of equipment for taking retinal images.

Carlos Law, Funeng’s deputy general manager, said mass production of the equipment could be realized this year with sufficient funding.

Benny Zee Chung-ying, director of the Centre for Clinical Research and Biostatist­ics at the university’s Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care, said: “The innovation center, an embodiment of industry-university research collaborat­ion, will help Hong Kong’s sports sector to identify elite athletes and bring out their potential while promoting the developmen­t of sportsrela­ted technology.”

Zee said he hopes the center will also help promote the economy and academic developmen­t in Hong Kong.

The developmen­t of sports will create jobs and business opportunit­ies and also benefit public health, he said.

Zee said the technology is mature and can identify risks of stroke and depression, so widespread applicatio­n could benefit the whole world.

Sports technology will be the start, he said, with other sectors such as traditiona­l Chinese medicine to be explored in the future.

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