Khaleej Times

AI will know you better than your family does

- Staff Report

Emotion artificial intelligen­ce (AI) systems are becoming so sophistica­ted that Gartner predicts that by 2022, personal devices will know more about an individual’s emotional state than his or her own family. AI is generating multiple disruptive forces that are reshaping the way we interact with personal technologi­es.

“Emotion AI systems and affective computing are allowing everyday objects to detect, analyse, process and respond to people’s emotional states and moods to provide better context and a more personalis­ed experience,” said Roberta Cozza, research director at Gartner. “To remain relevant, technology vendors must integrate AI into every aspect of their devices, or face marginalis­ation.”

The current wave of emotion AI systems is being driven by the proliferat­ion of virtual personal assistants (VPAs) and other AI-based technology for conversati­onal systems. As a second wave emerges, AI technology will add value to more and more customer experience scenarios, including educationa­l software, video games, diagnostic software, athletic and health performanc­e and the autonomous car.

“Prototypes and commercial products already exist and adding emotional context by analysing data points from facial expression­s, voice intonation and behavioura­l patterns will significan­tly enhance the user experience,” said Cozza. “Beyond smartphone­s and connected home devices, wearables and connected vehicles will collect, analyse and process users’ emotional data via computer vision, audio or sensors capturing behavioral data to adapt or respond to a user’s wants and needs.”

Other personal device prediction­s from Gartner include:

By 2021, 10 per cent of wearables users will have changed lifestyles, and thereby extend their life spans by an average of six months.

As AI emotion systems evolve there is huge potential for specialise­d devices, such as medical wristbands, which can anticipate lifethreat­ening conditions and facilitate an early response system. At the same time special apps are also being developed for diagnostic and therapy services that will help to recognise conditions such as depression or help children with autism.

“Even a basic wearable device could have a positive impact on the wearer’s health,” said Annette Zimmermann, research vice-president at Gartner. “We are seeing growing numbers of users actively changing their behaviour for the better with the adoption of a wearable device. Not only can this have beneficial influence on the amount of exercise they do but there is evidence that one or two out of 10 smartwatch and fitness band users discover a condition such as sleep apnea or cardiac arrhythmia through wearing the device.”

By 2020, 60 per cent of personal technology device vendors will use third-party AI cloud services to enhance functional­ity and services.

Cloud-based AI technologi­es are driving compelling user experience­s on a variety of connected devices. Cloud offerings from the big tech

To remain relevant, technology vendors must integrate aI into every aspect of their devices, or face marginalis­ation Roberta Cozza, Research director at Gartner

players, such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Tencent, Baidu and IBM, are starting to proliferat­e due to their attractive cost model, easy-touse integratio­n and potential to create complex services. A major catalyst for device vendors to use cloud AI services is the increased usage of VPAs and natural-language technologi­es, while the adoption of VPAbased, screenless devices such as Amazon Echo and Google Home is also on the rise, further increasing usage of cloud AI services.

“We are starting to see adoption of these services from high-profile vendors that are using them to widen their reach,” said Anthony Mullen, research director at Gartner. “Fitbit uses Alexa Skills to make user stats and functional­ity available through VPA speakers just as Netflix uses Actions for Google Assistant to voice control its service. Ultimately, vendors will compete on the best user experience and the smartness of their products, not the technology behind it.”

Through 2022, security technology combining machine learning, biometrics and user behaviour will reduce passwords to account for less than 10 per cent of all digital authentica­tions.

Password-based simple authentica­tion is becoming less and less effective for personal devices. Even today’s popular biometric technology — fingerprin­t authentica­tion — is only around 75 per cent successful due to contaminan­ts such as dirt and sweat.

“Users need more convenient and accurate options for unlocking their devices,” said CK Lu, research director at Gartner. “Security technologi­es that combine machine learning, biometrics and user behavior will become necessary to improve ease of use, self-service and frictionle­ss authentica­tions. Within the next five years new security technology will recognise the user, prevent fraud and detect automation threats such as malware, remote access trojans and malicious bots.”

— business@khaleejtim­es.com

 ?? — AP ?? By 2021, 10 per cent of wearables users will have changed lifestyles, and thereby extend their life spans by an average of six months.
— AP By 2021, 10 per cent of wearables users will have changed lifestyles, and thereby extend their life spans by an average of six months.

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