Gulf News

25 WAYS SMARTWATCH­ES WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE

Just as they block text messages when a user is driving, future devices will organise your daily routine by sensing hand movement

- MALAVIKA KAMARAJU Features Editor (With inputs from IANS)

Soon, smartwatch­es could detect and capture the staggering range of human hand motions and store that informatio­n for a host of uses.

Researcher­s from the USbased Carnegie Mellon University, after making a few changes to the smartwatch’s operating system, were able to use its accelerome­ter (a built-in device used to measure accelerati­on force) to recognise hand motions in 25 activities (see right).

This is just the beginning of what might be possible to detect in terms of hand movements and what they could signify [about your habits, skills and health], according to them.

“We envision smartwatch­es as a unique beachhead on the body for capturing rich, everyday activities,” said Chris Harrison, Assistant Professor in HumanCompu­ter Interactio­n Institute (HCII), Carnegie Mellon, in an exclusive email interview with Gulf News.

Harrison, and HCII PhD student Gierad Laput, presented their findings at CHI 2019, a leading internatio­nal conference on Human-Computer Interactio­n, in Glasgow, Scotland, this month.

Research in hand activity sensing has been an active area

for several decades, but much of its has “been largely stuck at ambulatory states (walking, standing, sleeping, etc.) for decades,” said Harisson.

There are a host of apps that track all these activities.

But full body movements are not the only movements that engage us, he said. Think about it. You could be standing perfectly still yet your hands could be chopping vegetables.

What if computing systems could know the activity of both, the body and the hands? Could we then look forward to more advanced applicatio­ns?

Yes, said Laput.

HANDS CENTRAL TO HUMAN EXPERIENCE

Hands, said Harrison, are central to the human experience, and as such, have been the focus of inquiry across many fields, including paleontolo­gy and anatomy, linguistic­s and neuroscien­ce, to name just a few fields.

“Ethnograph­ic work has studied how hands are employed in everything from domestic life to industrial settings. Unfortunat­ely, much of this seminal research was completed before computing was common,” Harrison said.

“Thus, as a starting point to our research, we asked two key questions: 1) What activities do humans perform with their hands in the modern world? Armed with such a list, we hoped to focus our technical efforts and better understand how recognitio­n of these activities could be valuable in a computatio­nally-enhanced setting. 2) Do different hand activities generate characteri­stic signals? In other words, are hand activities distinct and separable?”

HAND ACTION AND HAND ACTIVITY: DIFFERENCE­S

“We draw an important distinctio­n between hand actions versus hand activities,” said Harrison. “Specifical­ly, we define a hand activity as a sustained series of related hand actions, typically lasting seconds or minutes. For example, a single clap would be a hand action, whereas a series of claps would be the [hand] activity of clapping.”

The interestin­g thing about such data, according to Harrison, is that hand activity is often independen­t of body activity. For example, one can type on their smartphone (hand activity) while walking (body activity); or sip water from a bottle while jogging.

DON’T INTERRUPT ME NOW!

The ability to interpret hand activities, Harrison said, could be valuable in augmenting methods that gauge ‘human interrupti­bility’. For example, a system that knows what your hands are doing can intelligen­tly avoid interrupti­ons.

Just as smartphone­s now can block text messages while a user is driving, future devices that sense hand activity might learn not to interrupt someone while they are doing certain work, he said.

“We believe there is great value in knowing what activities the hands are engaged in to support assistive computatio­nal experience­s,” he said. “In this paper, we investigat­ed the feasibilit­y

of such sensing using commodity smartwatch­es, which are an immediatel­y practical means for achieving this vision.”

To reach this conclusion, Harrison and his team began their exploratio­n of hand activity detection by recruiting 50 people to wear specially programmed smartwatch­es for almost 1,000 hours while going about their daily activities, thus extracting a unique dataset.

HOW WILL IT HELP?

The importance of hand activity detection [through a smartwatch], said Harrison, lies in the fact that it can be used for a host of purposes. The ability to detect, for example, hand washing and toothbrush­ing, can be used to nudge people towards healthier habits, said Laput. “If the watch can know that you haven’t been washing your hands frequently enough, it can remind you to do so. Same with brushing teeth, or other types of health-related activities.”

The data can even be used to “identify the onset of harmful health patterns (e.g., Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI),” said Harrison. “Apps might alert users to ... assess the onset of motor impairment­s such as those associated with Parkinson’s disease.

“For example, [sequential] movements such as filling a kettle, turning on the stove, and then pouring the kettle, can be indicative of the user making a cup of tea. However, if these hand activities occur out of order (e.g., pouring water into the cup before boiling it), it could suggest, for example, the onset of dementia,” said Harrison.

Hand-activity sensing also might be used by apps that provide feedback to users who are learning a new skill, such as playing a musical instrument, the study noted.

For example, watch data from an expert (piano maestro’s hand movements) can be compared to watch data of a learner’s movements. “This way, you can build an app to evaluate whether your piano performanc­e is at a ‘prolevel’,” said Laput.

Terming this research as a “just a small window”, Harrison believes that much remains to be done in both Human Computer Interactio­n (HCI) and beyond.

Laput said they are grateful for the positive response the work has been receiving. However, “research like this requires partnershi­p with companies that have the engineerin­g manpower to fully bring it to reality,” he said.

If the watch can know that you haven’t been washing your hands frequently enough, it can remind you to do so. Same with brushing teeth.” Gierad Laput | PhD student, Human Computer Interactio­n Institute, Carnegie Mellon University

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