Miami Herald (Sunday)

South Korean firm’s smart dog collar tells owners what’s in a bark

- BY MINWOO PARK Reuters

A South Korean startup has developed an AI-powered dog collar that can detect five emotions in canines by monitoring their barks using voice recognitio­n technology.

The Petpuls collar can tell pet owners through a smartphone applicatio­n if their dogs are happy, relaxed, anxious, angry or sad. It also tracks dogs’ physical activity and rest.

“This device gives a dog a voice so that humans can understand,” Andrew Gil, director of global marketing at Petpuls Lab, told Reuters.

The company began gathering different types of barks to analyse dogs’ emotions in 2017. Three years later, they developed a proprietar­y algorithm based on a database of more than 10,000 samples from 50 breeds of dogs.

“I thought she was just happy when she played and felt sad and anxious when I wasn’t home ... actually she felt angry when she lost a game she played with me, like how humans feel,” said Moon Sae-mi, who has a 6-yearold Border Collie.

The collar has a 90% average accuracy rate of emotional recognitio­n, according to Seoul National University, which tested the device the company says is the first of its kind to be powered by AI voice recognitio­n technology.

Petpuls Lab started marketing the collar online in October for $99.

The global pet care market was worth $138 billion in 2020, up 34%, Euromonito­r data showed, as more people spent time at home with their pets or adopted pets during the COVID-19 pandemic. The global dog population also grew 18% the same year to

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