Khaleej Times

This device will help you predict the future... wait, what?

- — rohma@khaleejtim­es.com Staff Report

dubai — Is it possible to predict what a person will buy before they do so, or when a device will finally bite the dust?

Scientists at United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) believe that to be possible and have designed and patented an invention that uses data-mining algorithms to make forecasts based on historical informatio­n.

Developed by Dr Jose Berenquere­s, assistant professor at UAEU’s IT College, the tool, called “System for Forecastin­g Future Events”, targets the aviation industry and the growing focus of airlines on predicting customer behaviour. In addition, the tool can also be used for other purposes such as healthcare. The invention, Dr Berenquere­s explains, capitalise­s on the fact that data is now everywhere, and that it needs to be interprete­d and put to good use in order to be of true value to businesses and to society in general.

“Reducing waste, increasing asset utilisatio­n rates, and increasing delivered value to customers are key activities of any organisati­on with global aspiration­s,” he said. “Now that collection of data from customers is economical and widespread, companies that keep doing nothing with that data will, basically, slowly die, because the companies that do something with it will be one per cent or two per cent more efficient.”

Amazon.com, he revealed, is a prime example, with its model predicting which customers will

Companies that do something [more] with [data] will be one or two per cent more efficient Dr Jose Berenquere­s, Assistant professor at UAEU’s IT College

become “gold” in a few months and which will not. With this informatio­n at hand, companies can better allocate their marketing resources and customer-relationsh­ip resources to the areas where they are more effective, and run on a lower budget while achieving the same results.

With his team, Dr Berenquere­s built a tool related to airlines’ customer management and air-miles programmes, containing two methods of processing data that allow a computer to make accurate prediction­s.

The first — dummy-variable generation — converts categorica­l data, such as gender, into numbers that a computer can quickly understand. The second employs a technique known as blending, reflecting the belief that the average opinion will be closer to the truth if a larger number of opinions are analysed. The team has also used time-shifting, where an airline passenger’s data stream — akin to an air-travel fingerprin­t, detailing the flights they have taken, their purchase history, website interactio­ns and other informatio­n — is reset to the first time they used the airline, allowing behavioura­l trends and developmen­ts to be identified.

 ?? Supplied photo ?? The invention capitalise­s on the fact that data is now everywhere, and that it needs to be interprete­d and put to good use in order to be of true value to businesses and society. —
Supplied photo The invention capitalise­s on the fact that data is now everywhere, and that it needs to be interprete­d and put to good use in order to be of true value to businesses and society. —

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