The Star Malaysia - Star2

People age fastest in their 40s

- By STEPHEN CHEN

CHINESE researcher­s say they have developed an artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technology that can calculate a person’s biological age from a 3D image.

Biological age is a measuremen­t of age based on various biomarkers, and can change due to lifestyle and other health factors.

The team from Peking University and Shanghai Jiao Tong University said they found the signs that someone was either a “fast ager” – with a biological age older than their numerical age – or a “slow ager” was most apparent between the ages of 40 and 50.

“Middle age is the ideal stage for ageing interventi­ons,” team leader Han Jingdong from Peking University said in a paper published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Metabolism this month.

In a press release posted on the website of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the team said its study showed that yoghurt, coffee, fruits, chicken, beans and “eating on time” could help to slow down ageing.

In contrast, smoking, drinking alcohol, eating pickled food, taking antibiotic­s and exposure to ultraviole­t could make people look older, which was backed up by the results.

The system was built using a database containing 5,000 people’s facial features in 3D and related health informatio­n.

The team tested it on several hundred people in Beijing and found it only had a smaller margin of error between the subjects’ numerical and biological age – 2.7 years.

The system allowed Han’s team to build a biological ageing portfolio of people at a relatively low cost. The results showed there are “alternativ­e steady states” and ageing interventi­ons during those periods might be compromise­d by other factors such as growth hormones or diseases that tended to occur in older population­s, they said.

The technology is based on an AI algorithm known as deep convolutio­nal neural networks, could be used as a “superior health estimator”, the study claimed.

A study by researcher­s at Tsinghua University in 2017 found that some fast-growing genes in childhood could prolong health and life. A large-scale study on young people in the United States, Britain, Israel and New Zealand found that ageing could start as early as 26.

In an experiment conducted by researcher­s in San Diego in 2018, volunteers were shown images simulated by a computer of their face five years later with or without regular sun tanning.

Most volunteers decided to stop going to the beach after seeing what they might look like if they did not.

Han’s study said the new technology could help to manage China’s ageing problems but said the biometric informatio­n would have to be well protected.

“It should be carefully guarded against any unethical use,” the paper said.

 ??  ?? Researcher­s used 3D images to determine how much younger or older people look compared to their actual age.
Researcher­s used 3D images to determine how much younger or older people look compared to their actual age.

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