The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Meet the robots that will care for you in old age

Our Health Editor meets the spookily lifelike new generation of artificial humans and asks...

- From Barney Calman HEALTH EDITOR IN LAS VEGAS

THEY look, sound and chatter away pretty much like ordinary people. In reality, they are anything but. Amid much hysteria and hype, tech giants Samsung have unveiled the first ever digitally generated ‘artificial humans’ – a few of them are pictured on these pages. Powered by super intelligen­t computer programmes that learn how to adapt to their users, they laugh, show concern and emote, and each one is unique.

And they are disturbing­ly real.

Samsung’s artificial intelligen­ce (AI) developmen­t arm, Star Labs, hosted a launch event last week to showcase just what these simulation­s, known as Neons, might look like and what they could do.

But these creations – and a wealth of other gizmos on show at the convention – are not just designed to be mere assistants carrying out routine tasks that we real humans find just too humdrum.

They could solve the growing problem of loneliness and isolation in our communitie­s, and even help to solve Britain’s care crisis

Each Neon starts life as a real person – an actor – filmed for hours, talking, moving and reacting.

Then, AI is able to pull apart each frame, pixel by pixel and piece them back together, like a jigsaw, so the images can be manipulate­d and controlled.

In a demonstrat­ion, one Neon – Mia – is instructed to smile, then look surprised, then raise an eyebrow. The actor may never have made these exact expression­s but the computer program is able to make the Neon do it realistica­lly.

‘In the same way that AI machines are able to record ten minutes of your speech and then computer-generate a voice that sounds just like you, but saying things you’ve never said, we can now do the same with images of people,’ says Star Labs’ CEO, computer wizard Pranav Mistry.

The Neons would appear on screens, such as a tablet or smartphone. There were clunky moments when the Neons’ lips moved out of sync with the words they were saying, but overall they were convincing­ly human – and it was an astonishin­g display.

Each will have a name and a role – the yoga teacher, pictured far right, is Cathy and the doctor is Dr Zawadi.

They could, one day, act as ‘fitness instructor, a financial adviser, heathcare provider… or just a friend’, Samsung claimed in a statement. Is that the goal? ‘Yes, partly,’ says Mistry. ‘Sometimes people just want someone to talk to, for mental support.’ And it’s an important point. With 1.2 million Britons ‘chronicall­y lonely’ and social isolation recognised as a public health crisis worse than smoking, even a synthetic friend might be just what some people need.

With this unveiling, Samsung has made clear their intention – to create robots that will become part of our everyday lives.

At the world’s biggest gadget show, called CES and held in Las Vegas last week, they launched Ballie: a yellow, spherical robot the size of a tennis ball that makes warm electronic bleeps as if it’s pleased to see you.

It’s a ‘life companion’ that responds to voice commands and, thanks to an integrated camera, can follow you from a safe distance without being a trip hazard.

Facial recognitio­n means it knows who it’s looking at. And it can tell what you’re doing.

‘Ballie knows my to-do list – and can tell me if I’ve already watered the plants because I’m always forgetting whether or not I have,’ says the actress hired by Samsung to demonstrat­e the device.

Ballie is just a prototype and Samsung wouldn’t let journalist­s touch it, let alone say ‘Hi Ballie’, as you’re supposed to, and nobody could answer my question as to whether it could cope with stairs.

So will these devices soon be a familiar sight in all our homes?

Experts I spoke to said, emphatical­ly, yes. And Samsung hinted they may have a far more important role –beyond monitoring our pot-plant-watering routine – in helping to solve Britain’s growing care crisis.

AHUGE amount of new technology at the show was aimed at older, less physically able people with chronic conditions, from wearable devices designed to track movement and monitor physical wellbeing, to those aimed at improving mobility and aiding rehabilita­tion after a major illness.

Some simply promise to make life less lonely. And given our ageing population, the need for such high-tech solutions has never been greater.

There are more than 12million over-65s in the UK – 5.4million of them over the age of 75. We have more than 14,000 centenaria­ns, and this figure will at least double in the next ten years. But being alive doesn’t always mean being well.

In the UK, healthy life expectancy – the amount of our lives when we are free of chronic disease or disability – is roughly 63 years. After that, our chances of needing care for at least one or more serious health problem rises dramatical­ly. By 2040, more than six million older Britons will struggle with everyday tasks such as bathing, eating, dressing or going to the lavatory, and half of over-65s will have at least two chronic conditions, such a diabetes, lung or heart disease.

Huge swathes will be frail, visually impaired, suffering hearing loss, and even dementia. With resources scarce, a third of older adults with care needs receive no help, and lonely people with no one to check they’re OK are twice as likely to suffer heart disease, diabetes and die early.

And this is where tech comes in. Tony Prescott, Professor of Cognitive Robotics at the University of Sheffield, explains: ‘As we get older, the chances are we’ll be living with a chronic disease or disability that impairs how well we can look after ourselves. AI and robotics could be used to help us live independen­tly in our homes for longer, which is what most people want.’

Robots are already available to assist with simple tasks around the home, such as vacuuming and mowing the lawn. Soon, cookery robots will be able to help prepare meals.

‘AI connected to cameras around the home can also monitor movement and recognise changes from the norm that might indicate a problem – they can predict whether a person is at risk of a fall, or if they’ve been sleeping more and may be getting depressed, and then alert carers,’ says Prof Prescott.

Of course, Silicon Valley isn’t a charity. There is money to be made and questions about privacy: as we have already seen, some tech companies we have invited into our homes have behaved unethicall­y.

Home assistant devices and even our smartphone­s ‘spy’ on us, recording our conversati­ons – and the data they gather is sold to commercial companies.

There have been reports that home cameras have even been hacked, and intimate, private images posted online.

But following the money are some of the brightest minds in the world,

all focused on creating technologi­cal solutions that really will benefit us, particular­ly in older age.

So just what were the best advances unveiled at CES this year? Here are just a few of the most noteworthy.

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 ??  ?? ALL-ROUNDER: The friendly Ballie is described as a ‘life companion’
ALL-ROUNDER: The friendly Ballie is described as a ‘life companion’
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