Calgary Herald

Smartphone may become tricorder

New devices could test air, track noises

- SARAH FRIEF

Every year, the soothsayer­s over at IBM’s research division put their heads together to predict what technologi­es will change our lives in the coming five years.

This year’s theme: smartphone­s and senses.

If IBM’s eggheads are right, by 2018 our hand-held computers will let us feel the texture of a sweater and let us know when we’re coming down with a cold.

Paul Bloom, IBM Research’s chief technology officer, said the company is already working with universiti­es and developing prototypes to test these technologi­es further.

Smell: Phones will be able to test the air we breathe — letting us know, for example, the shelf life of a piece of fruit or when we’re on the verge of a cold or a fever.

Curators could use hand-held devices to monitor museum air quality, and hospital administra­tors could use them to help keep patients healthy.

Taste: Hand-held devices could keep tabs on our preference­s, recommendi­ng ways to make healthy food taste better.

Scientists can then be more precise about why some people like certain flavour combinatio­ns, and use mathematic algorithms to recommend new ones.

“Taste will be personaliz­ed to your taste buds,” Bloom said.

“By putting the correct flavours and seasoning on broccoli, I can have it taste like chocolate.”

Sound: By tracking noise from a source over a period of time, a computer could interpret what the sounds mean.

The technology could tell parents when a baby’s cries mean the child is hungry, tired or has some other need, Bloom said.

(Turns out, there’s an app for that.)

The same tracking of sounds and vibrations could help geologists study earthquake faults and marine biologists examine undersea life.

Touch: Using haptic, infrared and pressure-sensitive technology, computers could recreate the texture of the objects in the form of vibrations. People using smartphone­s could run their fingers over an item like a shirt to get a sense of what the silk feels like.

This has big implicatio­ns for online shopping, Bloom said.

Dermatolog­ists could also use the breakthrou­ghs to better understand skin abrasions.

Sight: Computers may be able to more deeply understand images, including medical scans that are typically examined by the human eye.

IBM is working with tools like Watson, the computer that beat humans in Jeopardy!, to apply the know-how in health care.

For anyone who wants to tweet on the theme, IBM created a hashtag: #ibm5in5

 ?? The Associated Press/files ?? IBM researcher­s are working with universiti­es to create a hand-held device that can test the air we breathe — letting us know the shelf life of a piece of fruit or when we’re on the verge of a cold or a fever.
The Associated Press/files IBM researcher­s are working with universiti­es to create a hand-held device that can test the air we breathe — letting us know the shelf life of a piece of fruit or when we’re on the verge of a cold or a fever.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada