When CES 2019 begins in Las Vegas this week, we’ll see the usual dizzying range of hot new consumer electronics gadgets — mixed and augmented reality, more immersive and higher-resolution displays, more photorealistic graphics rendering, faster processors, greater wireless bandwidth, longer battery lives and more compact and flexible form factors.
We’re also likely to see an onslaught of artificial intelligence-infused smart products at CES that, in recognition of users’ sometimes excessive addiction to gadgetry, will probably include new “digital wellness” features similar to what Google and Appleadded to their latest-generation smartphone operating systems over the past year.
Following these providers’ leads, many new gadgets on display at CES will probably leverage embedded AI to learn users’ habits automatically and predictively adapt their experiences, data-driven recommendations, screen resolution and brightness, notification and time-out settings, and other features to encourage usage moderation. Companies also will showcase new concepts in autonomous vehiclesthat focus on mood detection and other in-car user experience management features.
As a growing concern in today’s global culture, digital wellness goes well beyond the gadget capabilities that will be featured in CES 2019’s “health and wellness” track, which focuses on medical, wearable, fitness and accessibility applications. Holistic wellness is something that consumers now expect to be intrinsic to gadget design.
Perspectives on digital wellness vary widely, but a seamless, frictionless and ambient user experience is common to them all. It’s a safe bet that makers of practically every gadget will incorporate more nuanced voice-control “wake-words” that help users live with more complex menageries of gadgetry without having to engage them physically 24 by 7.
Infusing physical environments with seamless digital experiences is what smart homes are all about. At CES 2019, Wikibon expects companies to work wellness features into their smart-home solutions’ ambient experiences. One example of this is the “kits” that Universal Electronics has preannounced to address such smart-home wellness profiles as physical security, occupancy-sensed comfort, voice-controlled convenience and zonal personalization. In addition, companies will roll out more smart service robots for every home that, in addition to vacuuming your floors and folding your laundry, will contribute to wellness through their intrinsic cute, cuddly and playful natures such as those demonstrated by Softbank’s Pepper.
Finally, Wikibon expects launches at CES 2019 that incorporate AI-driven wellness features into products falling outside the traditional scope of digital gadgetry. For example, Samsung’s C-Lab has already preannounced several new AI-infused products that address various aspects of digital wellness, albeit not under that broad heading and not in the context of “gadgets” per se. At CES 2019, the company plans to showcase these and other C-Lab projects:
- Auto-adjusting physical desktops: Wellness must always start with the physical workspace in which we spend most of our time. Samsung C-Labs’ “Girin Monitor Stand” project has developed an AI-powered, sensor-embedded monitor stand that automatically adjusts to ensure that users are using proper posture while working at their computers. When users have bad posture, it subtly moves the monitor, an adjustment that naturally trains users to assume better posture without their necessarily having to noticing the change in monitor position. In addition, C-Labs’ “alight” project uses AI to adjust a desk light automatically to produce the optimal environment for concentration and health. It detects user actions through an embedded camera and automatically changes the light according to the situation such as study, relax and focus.
- Auto-adjusting hearing aids: Wellness is all about reducing strains on all the senses, such as by ensuring that people’s disabilities don’t hinder their full participation in the world around us. Samsung C-Labs’ “SnailSound” project has developed an AI-powered hearing aid. It consists of an earpiece and an app that analyzes user-preferred sound from feedbacks to simple hearing tests. It then calibrates sounds so that users can hear them more clearly. It relies on smart nonlinear amplification and AI-based adaptive noise suppression algorithms to amplify inaudible sound and suppress background noises.
- Auto-adjusting sound rendering: Wellness is also about optimizing sensory inputs to be as relaxing as they can be on our nervous systems. Samsung C-Labs’ “aiMo” project has developed an AI-driven solution for recording autonomous sensory meridian response or ASMR. Research shows that ASMR can help users to relax, deal with stress, control their moods, sleep more restfully and temporarily alleviate chronic pain. The aiMo project uses a smartphone, cover case and AI sound-rendering software to record ASMR audio in a way that obtains vivid, realistic, highly directive and spatially enhanced sounds. It enables anyone to create high-quality ASMR sound content easily without professional recording equipment in many environments.
To learn about these and other innovations, and to catch the festivities at CES, tune into the conference’s livestream starting Monday morning, and catch SiliconANGLE’s coverage of the news all week.